Remember, Remember by Sheldon Goldfarb
Fourteen-year-old Aleister Lister Smith is sailing through a peaceful existence at a respectable public school in Shropshire. Perhaps too peaceful, even a bit boring at times. The only adventures in his life are the ones he reads about in books like The Count of Monte Cristo.
But all that changes one day when the mysterious brother-in-law of his schoolmaster shows up. What are these troubles that the brother-in-law is undergoing, and why does he want Aleister to help him with them?
Before he knows what’s happening Aleister finds himself on the way to Manchester, ostensibly to work as a clerk in an insurance office, but really to try to find out the identity of a blackmailer.
Complicating his life once he gets there is a young girl named Kate who quotes Paradise Lost and seems alarmingly lively. Then there is Jack, his co-worker, who sneaks out during work to smoke. It all seems quite a different world from peaceful Shropshire.
And then on Guy Fawkes Night, there’s a murder.
***
"As the long summer vacation looms ahead, parents looking for good reading for their teenagers should consider Sheldon Goldfarb's new novel, "Remember, Remember." Set in Victorian England, readers will meet an engaging group of characters who inadvertently get caught up in the traditional antics of a Guy Fawkes Day celebration that lead to a challenging mystery. Apart from good entertainment for adolescents, they will painlessly learn something of English culture in the 19th century as well as find their curiosity piqued by references to the 17th century plot to destroy the houses of Parliament. They may go to the library or the nearest encyclopedia to learn more about Guy Fawkes! Good things to read is the perfect antidote for youngsters cut adrift from their school structure." -- Dr. Doris Meriwether, Emeritus Professor of
Literature, University of Louisiana at Lafayette
"I am most impressed with your style. The sentences flow along at a
good pace and young readers, I believe, will find the developing plot as
captivating as I did."
-- Dr. Doris Meriwether, Emeritus Professor of
Literature, University of Louisiana at Lafayette
"I love your story!! Aleister is so cool. You have loads of mystery and I
can never wait to get more chapters." --
Eve Mozur, age 11
"I really like your sense of writing because you put so much detail in it
and I love your sense of adventure." --
Brody Watson, age 11
"A good read, full of Dickensian characters, red herrings and a hint of
a love interest." -- Diane Dakers, Victoria Times Colonist
"Goldfarb is a good writer...the possibility of a sequel clearly presents itself." -- The Gazette (Montreal)
Review by The Grumpy Old Bookman
"... Sheldon Goldfarb's doctorate in Victorian literature, his life-long
interest in history and his previous publications on William Makepeace
Thackeray have served him extremely well for his debut young adult
historical mystery novel, *Remember, Remember*. His story is an
intriguingly entertaining mix of blackmail, murder, and youthful romance,
shot through with large dollops of tension and suspense, and set in an age
in England when the East India Co. was still an economic force to be
reckoned with, the Darwin-Huxley debates over evolution were to be listened
to, aggressive young women shouldering their way into the workforce as
typing machine operators were to be wondered about, and public boarding
school lads like 14-year-old Aleister Lister Smith were to be reprimanded
for secretly reading *The Count of Monte Cristo*, or even worse, for
participating in Guy Fawkes Day celebrations.
"A shy but engagingly bright young fellow, Aleister ... gets the shock of
his life when he is removed from the security of his Latin and Greek studies
in his Shrewsbury school and put to work as an undercover apprentice clerk
and pretend nephew for Mr. Arthur Talbot, 'a big brown bear' of a man and an
insurance agent who is being threatened with blackmail at his firm in
Manchester. Like a dutiful Sherlock-Holmes-in-training, Aleister sets out
to solve the blackmailing while settling in to a Victorian family life style
where Mrs. Talbot quilts or reads Thackeray's books, Mr. Talbot scolds him
for not knowing more about the Fenians or lectures him on the emerging art
of photography, and teenage daughter, Kate, sets his head spinning with her
natural good looks, good-natured teasing, and outspoken feminist views.
Despite ... the daily distractions of his workplace ... Aleister inches
forward, sorting good clues from bad. Eventually, he discovers that Mr.
Talbot is being blackmailed for a good reason, and soon afterwards, that
blackmail and murder have partnered during the diverting events of the Guy
Fawkes Day celebrations ... It is unfortunate that Mr. Talbot turns up at
the wrong time and in the wrong place with his new-fangled photographic
equipment and is arrested as a suspect in the murder. So it is Aleister who
must, with Kate's able help ..., sort out the last of the mystery ...
"Once the teenagers have tidied everything up, Aleister returns to the
safety of his Shrewsbury school with his daily dose of Latin and Greek,
occasional indulgences of *The Count of Monte Cristo*, and his leisurely
dreams of being 'a detective again with Kate.' And if author Goldfarb is
also dreaming of reuniting them, we can be sure we'll get a well-told and
suspenseful story about refreshingly interesting characters in uniquely
interesting times. ..." -- M. Wayne Cunningham, Books in Canada
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