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I Am the Only Running Footman
I Am the Only Running Footman
I Am the Only Running Footman
Audiobook5 hours

I Am the Only Running Footman

Written by Martha Grimes

Narrated by Steve West

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

In a rainy ditch in a Devon wood, a hitchhiker is found dead. Almost a year later, on another rainy night, another murder; this time, however, the victim is found just outside a pub called I Am the Only Running Footman, near Berkeley Square in London’s fashionable Mayfair District. Devon policeman Brian Macalvie is convinced that the two murders are connected. And thus, in his eighth case, Richard Jury is drawn into the so-called Porphyria killings. A particularly elusive pair of murders. From the streets of London to the village of Somers Abbas, Jury and Macalvie are joined by the stolid if hypochondriac Sergeant Wiggins and the reluctant Melrose Plant. They meet in another pub, the Mortal Man, and, amidst the clatter and cry of the Warboys family, they ponder a labyrinthine set of clues.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 29, 2013
ISBN9781442363182
Author

Martha Grimes

Bestselling author Martha Grimes is the author of more than thirty books, including twenty-two Richard Jury mysteries. She is also the author of Double Double, a dual memoir of alcoholism written with her son. The winner of the 2012 Mystery Writers of America Grandmaster Award, Grimes lives in Bethesda, Maryland.

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Reviews for I Am the Only Running Footman

Rating: 3.7394957478991597 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

238 ratings7 reviews

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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Not up to her usual.. I think she did not have a good plot to stick to and just kept doing chapters of her normal style/topics .. ending is a total bust. Will make it hard to go back to another of hers.. reading trough the series but not in order I only have a few to go .. many better nes after this..
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Martha Grimes builds interesting characters and the setting glistens, but many times too many red herrings creep into the narrative. Blonde women of a certain appearance have been strangled and many police division stumble along attempting to find the killer. Enter the stage with Richard Jury and his cast of detectives. Before the killer can strangle Dolly, Jury and his crew of amateur detectives discover the killer’s identity. The reader learns about many English pubs and food and spirits and the minor personality traits of the characters: Fiona, the secretary of Chief Superintendent Racer, the devilish cat Cyril, the hypochondriac Sergeant Alfred Wiggins, and many others. What baffled me dealt with a character named Ned and also called Edward. Why this difference? The detail provides a better picture, but at times teeters at too much description.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    law-enforcement, murder-investigation, british, friendship, humor Extremely convoluted and yet fractured. All of the Jury/Wiggins/Plant books are more than a bit odd, but we read and reread them anyway. Me, I like to follow the freeing of Mrs Wasserman and the antics of Carol Ann of the outrageous lies.Steve West magnifies the drollery with his sardonic narration.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The continuing adventures of Superintendent Richard Jury of New Scotland Yard and Melrose Plant, former Earl of Caverness. When a hitchhiker, Sheila Broome is found strangled by her own scarf and 10 months later another woman, Ivy Childress is found dead in the same manner, Richard teams up with local divisional commander Brian Macalvie to solve the crimes. David Marr, related to the Winslow family is the prime suspect without much of an alibi. Richard, Macalvie, Wiggins and Plant need to find the murderer before another crime is committed.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Typical Grimes mystery. If you like her works, you will find this one different and fun. I didn't guess "who done it" until the last couple of chapters.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The latest book in the Martha Grimes series (well, for me, anyway, as I slowly read them in order). I truly love Richard Jury and Melrose Plant and all the other assorted characters, but, as in most series, there are up books and down books. This wasn't a bad little story, but it didn't hold up to the level of some of her truly phenomenal mysteries. Two young women are murdered, ten months and different cities separating their deaths. No connection might have been made except for the method of murder: strangled by their own scarves. Jury is drawn together again with Macalvie, divisional commander in Devon, who first appeared in the last book in the series and looks to be a new recurring character. His fiery temperament and bullying interrogation methods are a sharp contrast to the calm and charming Jury. Of course, they have become hostile friends by now, and their dynamic is fun to watch in this novel. Melrose Plant must also have a say in the matter, as he is friends with friends of the accused murderer (it's a small world for those rich nobles).The only clue they have is from the second woman, Ivy Childess, who met her boyfriend, David Marr, in the pub where she was murdered hours later. Through Marr they are drawn into the Winslow family and start to uncover various skeletons hidden in the closet as they scramble to find the truth. As with any fun British manor mystery of the Agatha Christie sort (a kind I particularly enjoy), the surface is deceptive, and the relationships are more twisted than the family would like to present. A couple of smaller subplot mysteries must be unraveled before the truth is revealed. Grimes writes such delightful characters. Jury, and his hypochondriac sergeant Wiggins, are fantastic. Plant is a great comic relief character and Macalvie's gruff demeanor is a new change of pace. I even love the minor characters that often crop up in only one or two chapters, the other tenants in Jury's apartment, Mrs. Wasserman and Carol-Anne. Their stories are slowly evolving over the course of every novel, and I was delighted to see Mrs. Wasserman starting to relax her fear and paranoia. Good work, Carol-Anne!Why was this just a mediocre read, then, when all the characters continue to be wondrous? The mystery was much thinner this time around. Usually we delve a lot deeper into the backgrounds of the main suspects, whereas this time it felt like we just scratched the surface. Also, Plant was really a useless character as far as the mystery was concerned (although his hazardous stay at the local pub was laugh-out-loud funny). I even predicted the outcome of the subplot mysteries; speaking of which, there was really only one to speak of, and usually Grimes weaves in a few more. She didn't even bother with the astrology connection which could have been an excellent red herring.Not to say that this novel was bad - I did give it three starts for a good read - it was a fast read and I was curious about the outcome. It just wasn't as good as Grimes can be. More like a small slice of Jury goodness. Actually, I expected it might be less than her meatier books when I first started, because the font was so much smaller. Just to vent a moment: I don't really care about font sizes, but when every book in the series uses the same font, and then all of a sudden the next book's font size is noticeably larger than the rest, but the thickness of the book is the same, and you know that they changed the font just so that they could have the same number of pages even though it should be a shorter book! ... well, that annoys me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Eighth in the Richard Jury series.A young woman is strangled on a lonely highway pulloff--on Brian Macalvie's turf. 10 months later, another young woman is strangled the same way outside a Mayfair pub of the title, bringing in Richard Jury. suspicion falls on the latter woman's lover, David Marr, a member of a very wealthy and very close knit family. Melrose Plant becomes involved when another young woman, in love with Marr, pleads with Melrose to visit Marr and his family--neighbors--to see for himself that David could not be the killer. Encouraged as always by Jury to be a mole, Plant travels to Somers Abbas and stays at The Mortal Man, a local inn. Which allows Grimes to invent yet another of her wildly eccentric families, the Warboys, owners and operators of the inn. More "normal" than the Cripps family of London's Catchcoach St, that still leaves enormous leeway for bizarre behavior and relationships within the Warboys family, resulting in an excruciatingly funny chapter in the book. In addition, Grimes introduces a number of other characters who will recur in the series, and a new job for Carole-anne Palutski as a fortune-teller in an occult shop in Covent Garden--a location that will recur as well.That said, there isn't much more to recommend the book. Grimes gives a fairly good look at the Royal Pavilion in Brighton as local color backdrop for the climax of the book. The plot is pretty pedestrian and not very interesting. Normally, at least one child plays a crucial role in the series; in the 6th and 7th books of the series, the plot actually revolves around a young person. In this book, as in the first book, Man With a Load of Mischief, 2 young children have critical information for Jury and Macalvie, but in cameo roles.Grimesism: "Wiggens, thought Jury, would have taken shock treatments to ward off the flu."While Grimes' wit and inventiveness with characters enlivens this book, it can't cover the plodding story.