The Temporal Detective Agency gets together in Remember Remember for their most dangerous adventure yet. Tertia, Unita, and their boyfriends’ holiday plans are ruined by the mysterious Mr North, from the Federal Bureau of Infinity, asking them to help stop two American presidents being kidnapped for ransom. However things are not as they seem. The Agency starts on a time travelling adventure that takes them to 19th century America and to the American War of Independence, as well as to 17th century London where they get mixed up in one of the most famous conspiracy plots of all time.. On the way, they get help from people such as H G Wells, Thomas Edison, the Three Witches from Macbeth, General Custer and amazingly Al Capone. Once again Tertia tells the story and together with Unita her cousin, she takes the Agency into a time travelling rollercoaster minefield of an adventure that nearly ends in a Big Bang ... twice! The rest of the Agency Merlin the famously female wizard, Marlene her younger sister, Galahad the celebrity chef and Gawain all play their parts. Who is the mysterious Mr North? That's what the girls and their boyfriends need to find out.
I live in Hampshire with my wife, son and cocker spaniel. My daughter and her husband live nearby. Twice a year I go to the Gower with my beloved dog and we walk for miles along the glorious coastline. Amazingly, many plotlines arise during those trips and lots of plot logjams get freed up. It's a very cathartic time! My day job is in complex IT sales, though if enough people buy the Temporal Detective Agency books I'll happily hang up my computer shoes and become a full-time author. You can help me!
A fast, playful time-travel adventure that leans into its own audacity. Remember Remember throws the Temporal Detective Agency into a high-stakes puzzle involving kidnapped presidents, shifting loyalties, and a trail that jumps from 17th century London to revolutionary America. The real strength lies in its imaginative mash up of history, fiction, and pop culture, H. G. Wells, Al Capone, and Shakespearean witches collide without losing narrative momentum. Told with humor and energy through Tertia’s voice, the story balances mystery and chaos well, building toward a climax that feels both absurd and cleverly earned.