The Lost Luggage Porter (The Jim Stringer Mysteries Book 3)
The author of The Necropolis Railway and The Blackpool Highflyer “succeeds brilliantly at re-creating a railwayman’s lot” (The Seattle Times).
It is winter 1906 and Jim Stringer has been promoted from sleuth to official railway detective for York station. His first day on the job, the mysterious Lost Luggage Porter, “a human directory to everything in York,” tips him off to a group of railway thieves. Jim is instructed by his Inspector to infiltrate their gang and is drawn along into their plot to carry out a robbery and make their getaway across the Channel. Soon Jim finds himself swept off to Paris with the thieves, his plight made even worse when his wife is threatened. Can Jim get to her before the villains do?
“Page-turning, confidently written . . .” —The Guardian
“Riveting . . . Plenty of action, plot twists and moral quandaries help this engaging mystery pick up steam.” —Publishers Weekly
“Stringer’s third adventure has the same engaging voice and lively splashes of historical color as his others.” —Kirkus Reviews
The Lost Luggage Porter
Long on atmosphere _The Lost Luggage Porter_ would be more accurately described as “suspense” than “mystery,” strictly speaking. As suspense, it’s not bad. But it’s not for everyone.The best things about the book are its terrific historical research, its wonderful sense of place, and its brooding and fascinating atmosphere. Martin has not only done his homework, he has a tremendous eye for historical detail. The book would make a good movie on that basis alone; the “you are there” sense goes a long…