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Jerusalem Inn (1984)

par Martha Grimes

Séries: Richard Jury (5)

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1,0121620,460 (3.78)23
From the rough but colorful pub that provides the novel's title, to the snowboard Gothic estate nearby, the chilly English landscape has never held more atmosphere-or thwarted romance. And Jury will never have a more mysterious Christmas. Five Days Before Christmas - On his way to a brief holiday (he thinks) Jury meets a woman he could fall in love with. He meets her in a snow covered graveyard-not, he thinks, the best way to begin an attachment. Four Days Before Christmas - Jury meets Father Rourke, who draws for him the semiotic square-"a structure that might simplify thought," says the priest, but Jury's thoughts need more than symbols. Three Days Before Christmas - Melrose Plant, Jury's aristocratic and unofficial assistant, arrives at Spinney Abbey, now home to a well-known critic. Among the assembled snowbound guests he meets: Lady Assington, Beatrice Sleight, and the painter Edward Parmenger. When they all assemble in the dining room, Lady Assington announces, "I think we should have a murder.".… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 23 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 15 (suivant | tout afficher)
Manchmal etwas wirr und langatmig, aber nicht schlecht! ( )
  Katzenkindliest | Apr 23, 2024 |
Easier than some to figure out, yet her marvelous characters make it a pleasure to read as always.

Ed. 2021: I'd forgotten but this was the start (for me) of the depression books. Because of it, Jury is one of my least favorite detectives, while Melrose Plant reigns supreme as my literary crush. ( )
  LeslieHolm | May 19, 2022 |
Christmas time and Superintendent Richard Jury finds himself in Newcastle; a cold, white, snowy, dreary place.

Jury meets Helen Minton in the local cemetery. She is doing some research on one of the local families. Jury finds himself attracted in her. Unfortunately, the next time he sees her, she is dead.

Melrose Plant is also in the area, staying at the home of an acquaintance, along with a houseful of critics, artists and the idle rich. And yes, Aunt Agatha has also managed an invite. When one of the guests is discovered dead in the snow, it begins to look like murder has arrived.

Jury believes there is a connection between the two deaths, but can’t seem to find the thread. His visits to the nearby pub, Jerusalem Inn, hold some secrets that are tied to the murders and possibly some older ones.

Little by little, Jury untangles the threads with the help of is unofficial assistant, Melrose Plant and Plant’s knowledge of the aristocratic world. Among those tangled threads are some secrets that are better left hidden. ( )
  ChazziFrazz | Dec 2, 2020 |
I suppose that part of my problem with this book could be that I had not read the first four books in the series. Perhaps had I done so, I would have some feeling for the characters. Perhaps their characters were developed in the earlier books and the somewhat anemic presentation in this book was presuming on that. But I never got the feeling that I actually could care about Richard Jury, and the chapter in which Melrose Plant first appeared was over-the-top boring -- partly because I failed to grasp that Mr Plant was an important character, and because the people who appeared in the chapter with him seemed to have no particular raison d'être at that point. (They never developed any in their own right, but some of them eventually did further the plot.)

So the book goes along and along, and the murders are solved after a fashion, and then comes the final chapter, which is devoted to a series of snooker games. Several of which are recounted blow by blow (shot by shot?). Tediously, screamingly boring if your entire knowledge of the game is "uses pool table and cues; balls supposed to go into pockets; but maybe not all the balls; might be synonymous with pool and/or billiards, or not". I closed the book with a feeling of relief.

Also, the publishers might do well not to devote the dust jacket to multiple comparisons of the author with Dorothy Sayers and Agatha Christie (e.g. "she surpasses them" "better than either" etc.), because the expectations thus aroused will not be met and the disappointed reader might become surly.

In all fairness, there were several extremely clever turns of phrase in the book which tempted me to repeat them to innocent bystanders. ( )
  muumi | Nov 10, 2019 |
murder-investigation, friendship, family-dynamics, law-enforcement

Verrry interesting, but strange, verrry strange. The coincidences pile up and so do the bodies. It's one of those books where you keep asking yourself: What are the odds? Well, the characters certainly are, as well as the venue. Many things are more than a little far fetched, but then again it is fiction.
Steve West does a fine job of tongue in cheek narration. ( )
  jetangen4571 | Apr 28, 2018 |
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From the rough but colorful pub that provides the novel's title, to the snowboard Gothic estate nearby, the chilly English landscape has never held more atmosphere-or thwarted romance. And Jury will never have a more mysterious Christmas. Five Days Before Christmas - On his way to a brief holiday (he thinks) Jury meets a woman he could fall in love with. He meets her in a snow covered graveyard-not, he thinks, the best way to begin an attachment. Four Days Before Christmas - Jury meets Father Rourke, who draws for him the semiotic square-"a structure that might simplify thought," says the priest, but Jury's thoughts need more than symbols. Three Days Before Christmas - Melrose Plant, Jury's aristocratic and unofficial assistant, arrives at Spinney Abbey, now home to a well-known critic. Among the assembled snowbound guests he meets: Lady Assington, Beatrice Sleight, and the painter Edward Parmenger. When they all assemble in the dining room, Lady Assington announces, "I think we should have a murder.".

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