1.5 to 2 Stars for THE HORSE YOU CAME IN ON, #12 in this series. This is one which is not among my favorite Richard Jury Mysteries.
MY RATING GUIDE: 1= I NEARLY DNF; What was that?; 2= NOPE; NOT FOR ME; 3= This was okay/cute; 3.5= I enjoyed it; 4= I liked it a lot; 5= I Loved it, it was great! (I seldom give 5 Stars).
THE HORSE YOU CAME IN ON was a reread for me as I read it first soon after its original publishing years ago. After enjoying most of the earlier Richard Jury novels, recently I had been wondering what caused me to stop enjoying these mysteries. But after struggling to complete THE HORSE YOU CAME IN ON I began to remember. Long sections of the first half of THYCIO moved extremely slowly, almost aimlessly, concentrating on rather endless lines of self-introspection individually with Melrose, Jury, and secondary characters - seemingly for no apparent or particular purpose - I caught myself nearly falling asleep 3 separate times, breaking away to pick up and finish entirely different novels in between. I finished THYCIO only because of my compulsion to see it to the end. Some readers may (possibly) enjoy THYCIO, claiming it is a clever novel with several subplots intertwining, pulled together in the conclusion but I simply found it exhausting and pointless. THE HORSE YOU CAME IN ON finds vacationing Superintendent Richard Jury, Sgrt Wiggins, and Melrose Plant together in Baltimore, US. Jury’s boss, Chief Superintendent Racer sends Jury to the US to investigate the murder of the nephew of an influential British Lady; the woman also an acquaintance of Jury. Side plots included - an Edgar Allen Poe element, the larking around of Jury’s Long Piddleton friends, and an unfinished business with a US professor/author, also an acquaintance of “Jury and Friends” from a previous novel (an unfinished mystery which will presumably to be solved in a later book, or not, as is sometimes the case with Grimes’ books).
The Superintendent Richard Jury novels are somewhere between Cozy Mysteries and Grisly Thrillers - depending on the particular title; a few have been rather dark. These mysteries aren’t particularly angst-filled generally but they certainly aren’t HEAs - Richard Jury simple isn’t that fortunate. His family home was destroyed and his parents killed during the WWII bombing of London in Jury’s youth. Subsequently, Jury was orphan-raised and alone until years later when an uncle finally claimed him. Jury is a intelligent detective - educated, intuitive, compassionate, observant, thoughtful with a talent and a gift for detection. He is blessed in his friendships but cursed by his boss and female relationships. Jury struggles with PTSD memories from childhood and occasional depression.
THE HORSE YOU CAME IN ON can be read as a stand-alone title but there are many personal relationships which weave through the series and sub-plots that pop up and are solved several books later - all of which are better understood in context. By book #12, there is a rich cast of secondary characters that feature more or less in each book - Jury’s wealthy and relaxed personal friend, former earl Melrose Plant; Plant’s assorted friends and acquaintances from Long Piddleton; Jury’s sarcastic and pompous Scotland Yard superior, Chief Superintendent Racer; Racer’s flirtatious secretary, Fiona Cligmore; the sneaky Scotland Yard CID “office” cat, Cyrus; Jury’s loyal, efficient, insightful and hypochondriac assistant Detective Sargent Higgins; Superintendent Jury’s London flat WWII survivor and PTSD inflicted Jewish downstairs neighbor, Mrs Wasserman and Jury’s sexy and impulsive, young upstairs-flat neighbor, Carole-anne Palutski.
This was a reread of the Richard Jury Mystery series for me. I’ve enjoyed certain titles more than others; THE HORSE YOU CAME IN ON is one I enjoyed considerably less than others (especially the earlier books or more recently, The Old Contempables, The Old Success, The Knowledge). I found it practically forgettable, barely worth the time.
READER CAUTIONS -
PROFANITY - Yes. Strong language is used on occasion.
VIOLENCE - This is a murder mystery with 3 deaths which occurred before the story begins. No real details included.
SEXUAL SITUATIONS - None.