- Audio CD
- Publisher: Books On Tape (2001)
- ISBN-10: 0736680101
- ISBN-13: 978-0736680103
- Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (102 customer reviews)
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,372,700 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Is Ms. Grimes getting tired of Richard?,
This review is from: The Blue Last: A Richard Jury Mystery (Hardcover)
Richard Jury's old cop buddy, Mickey, is dying. He calls on Jury's expertise to help him solve a decades old case of deception. When modern murder intervenes, Jury and his old friend Melrose Plant set out to unravel both the new and old mysteries.We see the usual suspects: Jury, Plant, Trueblood, the young child, the plucky boy, the old wealthy gentleman, the hard-hearted woman, the maybe-so/maybe-not imposter. What we don't see, alas, is real originality in plotting. As I read The Blue Last, I experienced deja vu--I had read this Richard Jury novel before. Plant and Trueblood together are amusing, as usual. Ms. Grimes seems to have put too much emphasis on perspective and art style to render her theme. There seemed something lacking there. Considering the location of their excursion, the absence of a certain female character was disappointing. The sudden bit appearance of an old female character was surprising and felt out of place, as though she had been added just to "make the readers happy. You felt like you'd met all these characters before--even the plucky boy with the dog living on his own. Add to this, the destruction of much of the "history" of the characters as we know it (perhaps this was tying in with her theme of perspective again) and the disappointment builds. At the end, when the killer is revealed, there is no surprise. Although motive may not have been apparent, the suspect certainly had been from the beginning of the novel. Perhaps my real disappointment comes with the ending, which can only be called ambiguous. If you dislike cliffhanger endings, you'll loathe this one. I give the book 3 stars mostly because I've read Martha Grimes since her first (Man with a Load of Mischief). Save your money for the paperback, though.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Maybe time to end the series.,
By Reader "angie42" (Georgia, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Blue Last: A Richard Jury Mystery (Hardcover)
I won't re-hash what everyone else has said already--But I actually liked the Florence trip to authenticate the painting. I think the point there is--do you really have to know if something or someone is authentic?If you have lived with and loved Maisie for 50 years, does it matter if she isn't really a blood relation? Or do you appreciate her for who she is--just like Trueblood's beautiful painting. After all, whether she is "real" or not, Maisie is hardly at fault, since she was a baby at the time of the bombing. Like other readers, I am having a hard time with the timeline in the Jury novels. Just how old is everyone, and is the story taking place "now" or a few years ago? If Maisie had an older sister (about 55 years old) how likely is it that 9-year-old Gemma could be the sister's daughter? Not to mention Jury's older cousin who has a baby.) And no one has pyjamas mixing Tweetie Bird with Disney characters. I think Martha Grimes is tired of this line of books, and if so she's might as well stop rather than dragging things out painfully for the fans. This book had a lot of potential, but too much co-incidence and unanswered questions. (Who is Gemma anyway? And why does every female in sight look like Vivian Leigh?) I always liked the way Hercule Poirot would wrap up everything at the end of a Christie novel!
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Almost Good Richard Jury Novel,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Blue Last: A Richard Jury Mystery (Hardcover)
"The Blue Last" is almost good, flawed by impossibly intelligent children, a dog who talks to himself, and forays into the art world that seem to have little application. There are errors here--for example, it is Henry V who speaks of "we few, . . . we band of brothers," not Henry IV. That small editorial error may be the objective correlative of what is wrong with this book. It seems hurried. Ms. Grimes seems to be growing weary of Jury and his friends. The book reveals her weariness. But is Ms. Grimes wrong to try to satisfy those of us who clamor for more of Jury when she is tired of him? The reader yearns for Jury because he had once been original, engaging, surrounded by delightful Dickensesque characters who did not need to mean anything. The weariness in this Jury makes us scrutinize those characters who float by and comment on the silliness of the human condition, seeking for them to add meaning to the novel. This is not a bad book. There are aspects of Jury's character that are beautifully and subtly developed. The story develops well, with many clues to the mystery imbedded into the interactions of the characters. The settings evoke an atmosphere that draws the reader into it. Avid Jury fans will be engaged throughout the book and enraged by the ending.
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