9780345468031
The Franklin Affair share button
Jim Lehrer
Format Paperback
Dimensions 5.15 (w) x 8.00 (h) x 0.50 (d)
Pages 224
Publisher Random House Publishing Group
Publication Date June 2006
ISBN 9780345468031
Book ISBN 10 0345468031
About Book

“Three may keep a secret if two of ’em are dead.”
–Poor Richard’s Almanack[pg. 27 of mss]

R Taylor arrives in Philadelphia for the funeral of his longtime friend Dr. Wally Rush with a heavy heart. Not only has the world lost one of its preeminent, Pulitzer Prize—winning American Revolution historians, but R has lost his mentor, the man who led him to devote his life’s work to the study of “The First American,” Benjamin Franklin. The bond between them was sealed when R did Wally a favor that could never be revealed. But Wally saved one final secret for R, disclosed in a letter conveyed by the will’s executor.

Written in the slow, painful script of the professor’s last days, the note delivers an incredible bombshell. Wally, it seems, had stumbled upon twelve handwritten pages in a code commonly used by spies during the revolutionary war. The pages refer to George Washington, John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison, and level a shocking charge–that Benjamin Franklin committed a heinous crime.

Wally, not wanting to foul the image of his lifelong hero, had kept this monumental secret until his death. But as R races to unravel the mystery, he faces an onslaught of obstacles. Vicious blackmail, a threat of sabotage against his own career, and grave personal doubts threaten to overtake R as he struggles with a discovery that has the potential to completely alter the fabric of American history.

Rich with revelations, rife with the darkest depths of deceit and mystery, and enlightened by the unparalleled insights of America’s first patriots, The Franklin Affair is a tense, constantly surprising novel about the ultimate quest for truth and justice.

Reviews

Library Journal

Investigations into plagiarism form the basis of this lively and engaging story of professional historians and the fast-paced world of best-seller publishing and distinguished academic careers. Reginald Raymond Taylor, a Benjamin Franklin scholar known simply as R, is serving on a committee looking into charges that a colleague has not properly credited the sources she used to write a popular account of Ronald Reagan's presidency. She is taking the offensive, threatening to expose members of the committee for similar transgressions, no matter how minor. At the same time, the nation's leading Franklin scholar and R's longtime mentor has passed away, leaving R a confidential letter regarding recently discovered material that could severely damage the reputation of the real Ben Franklin and that he has entrusted to R to investigate. In addition, a publisher is beginning to question whether R played a larger role than just research assistant on the deceased scholar's Pulitzer Prize-winning book. Famed PBS newscaster Lehrer probes the border areas between intentional fraud, inadvertent borrowing, assisting in research, and actually writing text in the entertaining style of a mystery novel. Recommended for all libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 2/1/05.]-Jim Coan, SUNY Coll. at Oneonta Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A diversion about scholars of early American history who venerate Ben Franklin-who may have been as unscrupulous as many of them seem to be. Glamorous Rebecca Kendall Lee, popular historian and TV guest, may have plagiarized a goodly bundle in Ronald Reagan: The Last Founding Father. As a consequence, she stands before an august panel of the ARHA (American Revolution Historical Association), who will determine her fate after verifying the crime. Trouble is, haughty Rebecca has scraped up her own evidence of plagiarism and lets the panelists know she'll use it against them if they're arrogant enough to find against her. Meanwhile, even bigger things are going on. As the panel ponders, Philadelphia is commemorating the death of Wally Rush, the great Franklin scholar and author of the wildly popular bestsellers Ben One and Ben Two. The dead scholar's faithful friend and research associate is historian Reginald Raymond Taylor (he goes by "R"), one of the ARHA panel members on the Rebecca case. R, having grabbed the Amtrak train from the Rebecca hearing in D.C. up to Philly, learns that he's been declared Wally Rush's literary executor and, on top of that, that the Babbitt-like president of BFU (Benjamin Franklin University) wants R to head up a Franklin center-with comely and intelligent Clara Hopkins possibly as colleague. As tempting as Clara may be, though, R is already promised to fellow historian (and blocked writer) Samantha. Lots more than just sexual conflict is afoot, however, after R reads the explosive letter Wally Rush left for him. Could it be true? Could Franklin really have done that? It will be up to R to save or forever tarnish the reputation of the great Franklin-even asanother revelation, this one about R himself, will make the Rebecca affair look like small change. Television anchor Lehrer (Flying Crows, 2004, etc.) offers light amusement in an academia where everyone seems perpetually on leave, classroom drudgery a thing unknown.