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Thomas Jefferson, Rachel & Me

von Peter B. Boody

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1941,153,217 (3.67)Keine
Authors pray for a Tweet like this: "Can't sleep! TJ, Rachel & Me has taken over my body & mind like no book before. Will it be a movie? Thanks for this work." - Roma Prindle, July 17, 2012.Thank you Roma, whoever you are. Maybe you're prescient! In August 2013, a major Beverly Hills agency somehow discovered this needle in a haystack and asked the author if the TV/film rights were available. So maybe someday (yes, it's quite the crapshoot) this book will make it to the screen.Why not read it now, before it's famous? Polished and slightly revised in September, 2013 -- in part to reflect the destruction of the big tulip poplar in the angle of Monticello's north pavilion.The story:What if Thomas Jefferson returned to life, penniless, powerless, and without a single slave? What if he meets a beautiful mixed-race woman he takes to be Sally Hemings reborn? What if he lands in a psycho ward or meets the President - at an Independence Day citizenship ceremony at his own hilltop home, Monticello, no less?Selected a favorite book of 2012 by the staff of the Urbana Free Library, made a Critics' Pick by Kirkus Reviews in its May 2012 national print edition and given 5 stars by the on-line San Francisco Book Review in March 2012, "Thomas Jefferson, Rachel & Me" is a tale told by retired history teacher, Jack Arrowsmith, a man numbed by the deaths of his wife and son. It's about his - and his late son's girlfriend, Rachel Carter's - adventures with the writer of the Declaration of Independence. They meet the ghost of Jefferson at Monticello and, fighting off their panic, agree to take him off to see America. A history grad student at Columbia, Rachel knows secrets about Jack's son and wife that she decides Jack must know. They will turn his world upside down, just as Rachel's world will be changed forever by her evolving relationship with Jefferson. Dazzled by Rachel, Jefferson regains the vigor of his prime as the trio travels together. But what then? For all its fast pace and humor, "Thomas Jefferson, Rachel & Me" is a story about hauntings and history. It's about love and friendship, grief and loss, family secrets, and America's own denial of its past. This is a story that will stay with you long after its bittersweet finale.Here's a recent comment (January 2012) from a reader completely unknown to the author: "Upon receiving this book as a gift I was told by the presenter that it was one of the better books they had read this year. I couldn't agree more. The story is moving, the characters are well developed and likable, even in their not-so-best moments. The author certainly humanized a pivotal American figure for me, even if it is the author's take on his personality. It serves as a nice reminder that these men and women were human as well, for all our faults and talents. I would definitely recommend this book."Here's what another reader said: "I read your book in three sittings, which surely tells you that I couldn't put it down. After the first chapter, I was hooked and when it ended, I wanted more. Your writing, especially your descriptions, is beautiful. Talk about using words precisely and effectively. I could see Charlottesville and Monticello and wanted to go back (especially to Fleurie, which must be new since my days). I also need to take that evening tour at Monticello. The dialogue was great, believable. Parts made me laugh. Your characters interested me, amazed me, surprised me, made me sad. I was fascinated by how you built the story, how the characters developed, how your imagination worked. I was intrigued by how much real history was there without any sense of a history lesson. And of course the Jefferson questions are irresistible. It was fun to read your book after having just read 'The Hemingses of Monticello' this winter. In short, WOW!!"… (mehr)
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I was hoping for something fresh, original, and thought-provoking. I got that and more - this book was also enlightening, moving, and at times laugh-out-loud funny.

Everybody felt real; I want to believe there really is a man as kind and honorable as Jack, and I want to believe every bit of history TJ revealed to us. Rachel was a bit harder to understand, but once I slowed down to think about what she was going through and why she was acting, and reacting, the way she did, it all made more sense.

The 'ghost story' and man-out-of-time elements were well-handled. They didn't dominate the story, as they might have if this were SF, but they weren't brushed off either - we did get to share in everyone's bemusement.

I do believe that with TLC this could be made into an interesting movie. I would have liked more of an author's note and/or bibliography in order to understand the research and how much of the history is substantiated and how much is hypothesized. But I suppose the book mentioned, [b:The Hemingses of Monticello|3364462|The Hemingses of Monticello|Annette Gordon-Reed|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1348245865s/3364462.jpg|3403769], is a good place to start.

Btw, one song TJ and Jack both knew is a Scottish Reel, Money Musk. On youtube, look for the video 'Bring back Money Musk' to see why it's so engaging.

I do recommend this book to anyone who is looking for a neat story about three very different people brought together by circumstances, whether or not the reader is interested in TJ or history or issues of racism, sexism, and politics. If the reader does have any of those interests, s/he will enjoy the book even more. ( )
  Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Jun 6, 2016 |
Brilliant. Intense & moving. Definitely for intelligent adults, both because it's R-rated and because it's a thoughtful story about issues & themes that kids can't actually relate to.

I decided to read it because I'm starting to feel as is I read the same thing all the time, despite the fact that I read so many different genres. I was not bored. The book does start quietly, but it builds to a climactic sequence worthy of the best Thriller and a resolution worthy of classic Literature.

But mainly it's a simultaneously beautiful and ugly character study. In the hands of just about any author Clifford's character would have failed; I would not have been able to get through the book. I wanted to despise him, but I couldn't. Nor, when I got to know him better, could I feel pity or contempt for him. Real people are multi-dimensional, and so is Clifford. It was a fascinating experience, getting to know him. Ok, so I never got to the point where I actually *liked* him, but I was rooting for him and for his relationships.

And the author taught me, via Clifford and via the other well-developed characters, a fair bit about human nature. I generally don't have a lot of patience with people who are more neurotic, more obsessed with gazing at their own navels, more anxious, less willing to face their issues & grow up & move on than am I. However, after reading this, I believe I can be more patient & forgiving, and more able to see in them their strengths & successes. And I will be sharing this attitude with my teen son, who is even more judgemental than I am. If Boody accomplished nothing else, he did do this little bit to 'make the world a better place.

But he did do something else - he wrote a lovely book. Not only do the themes resonate throughout the different time periods & places & even careers of 4 decades of several lives, but the writing itself is beautiful. It's not overburdened with symbolism, or overwrought purple prose, but it's fresh and authentic. Consider:

He and Clifford often shared family tales as if to challenge each other for the right to claim the most neurotic and least nurturing upbringing."

"New York was gray and mean. Boston was brown and soft. It seemed to know Anne. Each foot of Hanover Street unrolled like a magic carpet before her."

"[S]he continued to sing, so softly that he heard only the high-pitched click of consonants."

"You know how pictures can take a moment and make a whole lifetime look grand."

The only reason I'm not giving it five stars is because it doesn't fit my personal criteria - I can't recommend it to everyone I know. Disregarding the fact that it's not for kids, I actually have to be honest and admit that I know few people who are ready to slow down a bit and read something that will challenge them to think about life, love, sanity, beauty, family, sex, and sorrow.

I can't wait to read the author's other book!

ETA - forgot to add that I love the cover photos. Front is simply lovely and evocative, back is a total 'worth a thousand words' in that it says exactly what the book says.


" ( )
  Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Jun 6, 2016 |
Free on Kindle. Spoilers (if I remember). So this guy goes to Monticello. He's been there many times before. He used to take his son, before they became estranged. The son is dead but the guy goes to Monticello. He meets Jefferson. He tells his son's fiancee, who is African American, and the 2 of them find Jefferson and take him away to New York City. Jefferson becomes more and more alive, and of course the fiancee & Jefferson become a couple, because Jefferson likes lovely African American women and because the fiancee is a descendant, somehow. There are lots of words, and it is often interesting, and Jefferson learns about the modern world. The story doesn't make sense. Of course it doesn't but even as a fantasy there are holes and inconsistencies. And then eventually Jefferson becomes old again so they take him back to Monticello, and the fiancees father somehow does something, and things are healed. Somewhat.
  franoscar | May 5, 2013 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Member Giveaways geschrieben.
This was a great read! It's a ghost story, a love story, and historical fiction all rolled into one. I was hooked in the first chapter. The outcome for each of the main characters was a surprise. It's the kind of book you keep reading, because you just have to know what will happen. ( )
1 abstimmen Lschwarzman | Oct 8, 2012 |
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Unable are the loved to die. For love is immortality.

—Emily Dickinson

You ask if I would agree to live my 70 or rather 73 years over again? To which I say Yea. I think with you that it is a good world on the whole, that it has been framed on a principle of benevolence . . .I steer my bark with Hope in the head, leaving Fear astern.

—Thomas Jefferson to John Adams,
nine years before Jefferson’s death 
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I met the man I truly believe was Thomas Jefferson at Monticello one summer evening, when big trees cast long shadows across the west lawn of Jefferson’s mountaintop.
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“Are your people from Virginia? You speak exactly like some of my field workers,” Jefferson said.
“What? I ain’t no field worker, honey,” she said. “I am in the health care field. I ain’t no field worker. What trash you talkin’ about?”
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Authors pray for a Tweet like this: "Can't sleep! TJ, Rachel & Me has taken over my body & mind like no book before. Will it be a movie? Thanks for this work." - Roma Prindle, July 17, 2012.Thank you Roma, whoever you are. Maybe you're prescient! In August 2013, a major Beverly Hills agency somehow discovered this needle in a haystack and asked the author if the TV/film rights were available. So maybe someday (yes, it's quite the crapshoot) this book will make it to the screen.Why not read it now, before it's famous? Polished and slightly revised in September, 2013 -- in part to reflect the destruction of the big tulip poplar in the angle of Monticello's north pavilion.The story:What if Thomas Jefferson returned to life, penniless, powerless, and without a single slave? What if he meets a beautiful mixed-race woman he takes to be Sally Hemings reborn? What if he lands in a psycho ward or meets the President - at an Independence Day citizenship ceremony at his own hilltop home, Monticello, no less?Selected a favorite book of 2012 by the staff of the Urbana Free Library, made a Critics' Pick by Kirkus Reviews in its May 2012 national print edition and given 5 stars by the on-line San Francisco Book Review in March 2012, "Thomas Jefferson, Rachel & Me" is a tale told by retired history teacher, Jack Arrowsmith, a man numbed by the deaths of his wife and son. It's about his - and his late son's girlfriend, Rachel Carter's - adventures with the writer of the Declaration of Independence. They meet the ghost of Jefferson at Monticello and, fighting off their panic, agree to take him off to see America. A history grad student at Columbia, Rachel knows secrets about Jack's son and wife that she decides Jack must know. They will turn his world upside down, just as Rachel's world will be changed forever by her evolving relationship with Jefferson. Dazzled by Rachel, Jefferson regains the vigor of his prime as the trio travels together. But what then? For all its fast pace and humor, "Thomas Jefferson, Rachel & Me" is a story about hauntings and history. It's about love and friendship, grief and loss, family secrets, and America's own denial of its past. This is a story that will stay with you long after its bittersweet finale.Here's a recent comment (January 2012) from a reader completely unknown to the author: "Upon receiving this book as a gift I was told by the presenter that it was one of the better books they had read this year. I couldn't agree more. The story is moving, the characters are well developed and likable, even in their not-so-best moments. The author certainly humanized a pivotal American figure for me, even if it is the author's take on his personality. It serves as a nice reminder that these men and women were human as well, for all our faults and talents. I would definitely recommend this book."Here's what another reader said: "I read your book in three sittings, which surely tells you that I couldn't put it down. After the first chapter, I was hooked and when it ended, I wanted more. Your writing, especially your descriptions, is beautiful. Talk about using words precisely and effectively. I could see Charlottesville and Monticello and wanted to go back (especially to Fleurie, which must be new since my days). I also need to take that evening tour at Monticello. The dialogue was great, believable. Parts made me laugh. Your characters interested me, amazed me, surprised me, made me sad. I was fascinated by how you built the story, how the characters developed, how your imagination worked. I was intrigued by how much real history was there without any sense of a history lesson. And of course the Jefferson questions are irresistible. It was fun to read your book after having just read 'The Hemingses of Monticello' this winter. In short, WOW!!"

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