Publisher's Hardcover ©2013 | -- |
Paperback ©2014 | -- |
Grandparent and child. Juvenile fiction.
Time travel. Juvenile fiction.
Grandparent and child. Fiction.
Time travel. Fiction.
Cosmo is dealing with a series of losses: his brother died accidentally, Mom left him with her parents, and now Grandpa Kevin has developed Alzheimer's. In a moment of lucidity, Grandpa hands Cosmo a key to his boyhood home, Blackbrick Abbey, urging him to go there. The boy arrives (slipping back in time in the process) to find his grandfather as a 16-year-old house servant. Cosmo enjoys spending time with Kevin, but wonders if he can tweak the past in order to prevent some current problems. Fitzgerald's debut is narrated in a breezy twenty-first-century style that keeps the story from becoming maudlin ("The first time Granddad peed in the dishwasher was when me and my gran realized we were going to have to make a few changes"). The plot depends heavily on coincidence, but Cosmo gleans much from the young Kevin and his time-slip experience, enabling him to return home able to accept Grandpa's impending death. Pair with Mary Downing Hahn's Time for Andrew (1994).
Horn Book (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)In this Irish import, Cosmo travels back to his grandfather's youth and discovers that he's falling in love with the wrong woman. If Granddad marries good-looking Maggie instead of Granny Deedee, Cosmo won't exist. This genealogical conundrum is played out against the upstairs/downstairs world of 1940s Blackbrick Abbey, where Granddad is a stable boy. A fresh tale of secrets and boyhood schemes.
Kirkus ReviewsA trip to the past reveals family secrets and tragedies that help an Irish lad adjust to sad events in the present. Cosmo's brother, Brian, has recently died, his beloved grandfather Kevin is descending into dementia, his distraught mother has fled to Sydney in response, and his adored horse has been sent away. On a visit to nearby Blackbrick Abbey, he suddenly finds himself back in the 1940s, where he tries to impress the then–16-year-old Kevin with the importance of keeping both Brian and his powers of memory alive in years to come. He also helps Kevin to smuggle beautiful young Maggie onto the estate, but as Maggie proves less interested in Kevin than in the estate's owner, the plot takes a soapy turn with an illegitimate child who turns out not to be the only one in the story. (Fitzgerald is coy about the sex, leaving Cosmo to puzzle over a character's claim that Maggie is "unchased.") Back in his own time, the discovery of hitherto-unknown family connections, along with the returns of his horse and his repentant mother, begins to buoy Cosmo. There's far too much going on, but the author does thread Cosmo's narrative with helpful precepts such as, "If you let the past determine your future, you're probably screwed." The inexpertly juggled overabundance of storylines and themes makes this one to skip. (Time-travel fantasy. 11-13)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)With Cosmo-s mother off in Australia, he-s living with his grandparents, and although that might sound depressing-all -ticking clocks and hot chocolate and radio quizzes--Cosmo is enjoying himself. However, his grandfather-s memory is worsening (for one thing, he keeps forgetting that Cosmo-s brother is dead), and there-s talk of sending him to a nursing home and having Cosmo live with his uncle. Then Cosmo-s grandfather hands him the key to Blackbrick Abbey; when Cosmo opens the gate, he meets the abbey-s stable boy-none other than his grandfather, at age 16. Though Cosmo is thrilled to meet him, the past is more complicated than he expects. Older readers will see some of the plot twists coming, but debut author Fitzgerald adeptly conveys Cosmo-s love for his grandfather and his fury at the way arrangements are being made all around him; Cosmo-s distinctively Irish speech is another strong point. Watching Cosmo learn what can and can-t be fixed makes for a strong story that-s less about time travel than about love and memory. Ages 10-14. Agent: Clare Conville, Conville & Walsh. (Sept.)
School Library Journal (Tue Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)Gr 5-8 Cosmo is not happy with his name, his mother, or the fact no one seems to be listening to his advice about how to help Granddad Kevin remember important things, such as the fact that Cosmo's brother is dead. Granny Deedee is overwhelmed by the social workers who are taking an interest in Granddad, and Cosmo's mother is away long term to pursue business in Sydney. This means that the boy isn't getting a lot of attention from anyone but the bullies on the playground. One night, Granddad Kevin advises Cosmo to go to Blackbrick Abbey and open a gate with a special key he gives him. Cosmo follows his instructions and inadvertently time travels back to when Granddad was just 16-year-old Kevin and worked as a stable boy for the wealthy but stingy owner of the Abbey. Not long after his arrival, Cosmo helps Kevin sneak a beautiful young woman into the Abbey. While Cosmo is sure from the love-stricken look on Kevin's face that this is Grandma, her name turns out to be Maggie, which means he has to intervene to ensure his existence. Adventures and contretemps ensue, making for a rollicking ride. Cosmo's fresh and sassy approach to life is true to his youthful perspective. His age is left intentionally vague (as is what happened to his father), and his voice engages. The solidly constructed time-travel plot adds to the fun. Carol A. Edwards, Denver Public Library, CO
ALA Booklist (Tue Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book (Tue Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2014)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Tue Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2013)
Chapter 1
MY GRANDDAD was pretty much the cleverest person I ever met, so it was strange in the end to see the way people treated him—as if he was a complete moron. We were waiting for a train one day, not bothering anyone, when this boy said to me, “Hey. Hey you. What’s wrong with the old man?”
In fairness, my granddad did happen to be in the middle of quite a long conversation with a lamppost. But still, it didn’t give the boy the right to be so nosy.
I walked a bit closer to the boy, and I whispered:
“He suffers from a rare condition that makes him randomly violent to anyone who asks stupid questions about people they’ve never met.”
That very same week me and Granddad saw this program all about how Albert Einstein was always looking for his keys and wearing odd shoes and not brushing his hair for weeks on end.
“See, Granddad?” I said to him. “Einstein was exactly the same as you are. And no one ever thought there was anything wrong with his brain.”
“No one except for his teachers, who apparently thought he was an imbecile,” my granddad replied.
The next day he asked me where the toilet was. And the day after that he looked at me suddenly and he said, “Maggie, Maggie, what’s the plan of action now? When are we all going home?” which was kind of confusing, seeing as there was no plan of action, and seeing as we already were at home. And also seeing as my name is not Maggie.
My name is Cosmo. When I’m a legal adult, I’m going to change it by deed poll. I’ve checked it out, and it’s fairly straightforward.
The first time Granddad peed in the dishwasher was when me and my gran realized we were going to have to make a few changes. For one thing, we got into the habit of putting the superhot cycle on twice.
He began to repeat things over and over, and I knew that there was definitely something wrong, because he hadn’t usually been a repetitive sort of guy. It got to be pretty annoying. He began to forget the kinds of things that you’d never imagine anyone could forget, like for example that my brother, Brian, was dead, even though by then he’d been dead for quite a while. Granddad got this idea that Brian was actually in the kitchen, completely alive, and ready to make cups of tea for anyone who shouted at him.
“BRIAN! BRIAN!” he’d yell. “DO US A FAVOR LIKE A GOOD FELLOW, AND BRING US A CUP OF TEA!”
So then I’d usually have to go off and make the stupid tea. Granddad always said, “Ah, fantastic,” right after he took the first sip, as if drinking a cup of tea was the best thing ever.
When he started to get up in the middle of the night and wander around the house, poking about and searching in drawers and stuff, me and my gran kept having to follow him. We’d have to think of quite clever ways to convince him to go back to bed, which usually took ages. He’d sometimes have gone out into the garden before we’d even woken up, and we’d run out to him where he stood shivering, thin and empty. Like a shadow.
I’d say, “Granddad, what are you doing out here in the dark like this?” And he’d say, “I don’t know really. I used to love the dark.”
And after that my gran would sit with him as if he was the one who needed to be comforted, even though it was me who’d been woken up in the middle of the night. He would say, “Oh, my girl,” in a way that made it sound like Granny Deedee was someone quite young, which obviously she isn’t. And she’d look down at his hands and stroke them and she’d tell him how beautiful they were.
Don’t get me wrong—I mean, you could say a lot of nice things about my granddad, because he was a great guy and everything—but I really don’t think you could say his hands were beautiful. For one thing, they were old and brown and bent like the roots of a tree. And for another thing, instead of an index finger he had a kind of stump on his right hand that only went as far as his first knuckle. It wasn’t that noticeable except when he was trying to point at something.
Whenever I asked him what happened to that finger, he would look down and his eyes would go all round and he would say, “Good God! My finger. It’s missing! Assemble a search party!”
It was kind of a joke that me and him had before he got sick. Nobody else got it.
I tried to talk to my gran about Granddad’s memory, but she pretended it really wasn’t that big a deal. She said we would do our best for him for as long as we could, but eventually we’d have to tell Uncle Ted, who at the time was living in San Francisco being a scientist and never answering his phone.
“Aren’t there brain pills or something that Granddad can take?”
“Cosmo, love, he’s already on lots of medication.”
“Well, no offense, Gran, but you’d better go back to the doctor with him and change the dose.”
“It’s not the dose,” she said. “It’s the illness.”
I didn’t think that was a very constructive attitude. I told her I knew for a fact that there were loads of doctors who didn’t have that much of a clue what they were even talking about. I started telling her about this one guy I’d seen on the True Stories channel who’d had a heart attack because they’d given him rat poison instead of cholesterol pills, but all Gran said was, “Oh, for goodness’ sake, Cosmo, will you please stop it?” which was quite cranky of her if you ask me. She never used to be grumpy like that, no matter how many things I told her about.
Later that night I googled “memory loss,” and I honestly didn’t know why I hadn’t done it sooner. It turns out there’s a load of information for people in our situation. The very first link I clicked on was a website called:
THE MEMORY CURE
Proven strategies to delay and reverse age-related memory loss when someone you love starts to forget.
Those glittery words of hope shone from the screen, making me blink, and I could feel pints of relief pouring through my body, right down into my toes.
Excerpted from Back to Blackbrick by Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Cosmo must journey to the past to understand his future in this humorous, heartbreaking, and brilliantly original debut novel.
Cosmo’s granddad used to be the cleverest person he ever knew. That is, until his granddad’s mind began to fail. In a rare moment of clarity, his granddad gives Cosmo a key and pleads with Cosmo to go to the South Gates of Blackbrick Abbey, where his granddad promises an “answer to everything.” In the dead of night, Cosmo does just that.
When Cosmo unlocks the rusty old gates, he is whisked back to Blackbrick of years past, along with his granddad—now just sixteen-years old and sharp as a tack—beautiful Maggie, and the absolutely dreadful Corporamore family. But much more than time travel adventure awaits Cosmo on the old, sprawling estate: he’ll also discover revealing truths about his granddad, his family, and himself.
Abounding with humor and heart, this extraordinary novel is an original, unforgettable story about lost memories, lost times, and lost lives, reclaimed.