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The Train Now Departing: Two Novellas

The Train Now Departing: Two Novellas

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very different but very good by Martha Grimes
Review: "The Train now Departing" They share lunch, but he never is really there. All she wants from the renowned travel writer is for him to relate some of his adventures that would allow her to precariously live life through him. However, he cannot sense her total loneliness as he is only into himself even as he tells her to have her own adventures.

"When the Mousetrap Closes" Edith Parenger is excited about seeing actor Archie Marchbanks in her favorite tea shop. Behaving out of character for someone who debates with herself about leaving her bed, Edith goes to Archie's table to meet the rising star. Surprisingly, Archie is kind to his lonely admirer, who fawns over his every word. However, what will happen to her when he moves on as is expected of the handsome actor?

The poignant stories center on vulnerable, lonely women. The novellas are well written and dig deep into isolated individuals living in an urban environment. Fans of Martha Grimes' Jury books should realize that these two tales are a radical departure from the author's probing mysteries, but provide an insightful character study of being alone amidst a sea of humans.

Harriet Klausner 5/3/00

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Two Novellas by Martha Grimes
Review: Anyone looking for light reading won't find it in these two novellas about lonely middle-aged women. The first, The Train Now Departing, was slow-going and monotonous. The second, When the Mousetrap Closes, moved along better, but is another sad tale. Don't read these novellas if you need cheering up; read her Richard Jury books instead.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Two Novellas by Martha Grimes
Review: Anyone looking for light reading won't find it in these two novellas about lonely middle-aged women. The first, The Train Now Departing, was slow-going and monotonous. The second, When the Mousetrap Closes, moved along better, but is another sad tale. Don't read these novellas if you need cheering up; read her Richard Jury books instead.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: still a fan
Review: I am a big fan of Martha Grimes. I bought this book right away and saved it in anticipation. I wouldn't say I was disappointed with the stories but saddened for the women featured. The second story in particular, I felt to be clever and intriguing (I kept imagining something truly dastardly to take place.) There was just the right amount of suspense. The first, of which the book gets its title) was monotonous... and I am still puzzling over the heroine's reaction at the very end. Indeed I am still wondering why there were so many lunches involved? This does not detract from my admiration of M. Grimes and I can't wait to read her next endeavor.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: still a fan
Review: I am a big fan of Martha Grimes. I bought this book right away and saved it in anticipation. I wouldn't say I was disappointed with the stories but saddened for the women featured. The second story in particular, I felt to be clever and intriguing (I kept imagining something truly dastardly to take place.) There was just the right amount of suspense. The first, of which the book gets its title) was monotonous... and I am still puzzling over the heroine's reaction at the very end. Indeed I am still wondering why there were so many lunches involved? This does not detract from my admiration of M. Grimes and I can't wait to read her next endeavor.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An excellent departure for Ms. Grimes!
Review: I have been a Martha Grimes fan for 10 years now and have read all of her books. While I fell in love with Richard Jury and Melrose Plant, I still enjoy her other "non-Jury" mysteries. This book was no exception. The stories in this book are so wonderfully told. It was an excellent departure from her other characters. Martha Grimes prooves once again that she is a true writer. If you love Martha Grimes, pick up this book...you will not be disappointed...even though Jury, Plant, and the gang are nowhere to be found.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An excellent departure for Ms. Grimes!
Review: I have been a Martha Grimes fan for 10 years now and have read all of her books. While I fell in love with Richard Jury and Melrose Plant, I still enjoy her other "non-Jury" mysteries. This book was no exception. The stories in this book are so wonderfully told. It was an excellent departure from her other characters. Martha Grimes prooves once again that she is a true writer. If you love Martha Grimes, pick up this book...you will not be disappointed...even though Jury, Plant, and the gang are nowhere to be found.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A skilled departure for Grimes
Review: I picked up this slim book by Grimes because I was intrigued that this novelist, perhaps most famous for her mysteries and mainstream novels, would embark on a decidedly literary and less popular format, the novella. In THE TRAIN NOW DEPARTING, Grimes proves herself a versatile writer as comfortable with the subtlety of human interaction as she is with murder. The two novellas contained within the 185 pages are thematically linked. Each protagonist is a lonely, intelligent woman who meets regularly, for lunch or tea, with a man she struggles to decipher. Through these encounters, each edges closer to understanding the core of herself.

"The Train Now Departing" is the stronger (and longer) of the two; both the woman and her companion, a travel writer, are richly imagined and imbued with puzzling traits which humanizes them. While I cannot conceive of how the woman and the travel writer would have met and why they have established such an obviously painful routine, their exchanges illuminate the novella with touching realism. The contrast between the meals the two main characters share and the meals the protagonist consumes alone is a brilliant device that lends emotional force to the ending.

"When the Mousetrap Closes" is much more lively than the first novella, and the protagonist Edith's interest in Archie Marchbanks, a famous actor, is much more believable. However, the end of the novella suffers from gimmickry, cheapening everything that precedes it. I wished that Grimes had left the ends of the story unraveled rather than tying them up as she did. Despite this flaw, this novella has an almost irresistible charm.

These novellas are quiet and studied, with the emphasis on the inner lives of their protagonists. Readers who expect Grimes's genre fiction will be disappointed, but fans eager to explore another side of this author will be impressed by her range. I recommend this book only to those who understand - and embrace - the kind of departure Grimes has made.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful "departure" for Martha Grimes
Review: If you're a fan of Martha Grimes's mystery novels (she is the author of a popular series of British police procedurals starring Richard Jury), take a trip with Ms. Grimes into the "non-Jury" world in her new book of two short novellas. As always, the writing is superb--witty, evocative, sharp--and the characters fully realized and sympathetic (or quite unsympathetic, depending on the character...).

The first novella, The Train Now Departing, tells the story of an introspective, imaginative middle-aged woman who has an oddly compelling relationship with a famous travel writer. During the couple's frequent luncheons, the woman tries every trick in the book to get the man to talk about his fabulous adventures, in an effort to live vicariously through him. The man is taciturn, argumentative, and not at all forthcoming--in fact, he seems to dislike traveling immensely. The woman's inner dialogue and emotional life is fascinating; the two friends' (friends?) relationship frustratingly wonderful.

The second novella,When the Mousetrap Closes, is another story of an unlikely friendship--this time, between a somewhat isolated middle-aged Englishwoman and a famous English stage actor. Normally shy, the woman is compelled to approach the actor in a tea room to tell him how much she enjoys his work, and a friendship forms. The story of how their relationship progresses, their conversations about acting and life and beauty, and the tale's conclusion is deep, thought-provoking and sad.

If you haven't read Ms. Grimes's mystery novels, you'll be able to read The Train Now Departing with an unbiased mind--and I think you'll enjoy it tremendously, as I did. If you've read her mystery novels, but have never tried one of her "non-Jury books," turn the mystery switch off, pretend she's a brand-new-to-you author, and enjoy this excellent literary departure.


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