The Mysterious Benedict Society

The Mysterious Benedict Society
Author Trenton Lee Stewart
Cover artist Carson Ellis
Country United States
Language English
Series The Mysterious Benedict Society
Genre Young adult
Publisher Little, Brown and Company
Publication date
March 7th 2007
Pages 485 pp
ISBN 978-0-316-05777-6
OCLC 66392644
LC Class PZ7.S8513 My 2007
Followed by The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey

The Mysterious Benedict Society is a novel written by Trenton Lee Stewart and illustrated by Carson Ellis, first published in 2007. It tells the story of four gifted children: Reynie Muldoon, Sticky Washington, Kate Wetherall, and Constance Contraire, who all are formed into the "Mysterious Benedict Society" and are sent to investigate a facility called L.I.V.E. (the Learning Institute for the Very Enlightened), run by the brilliant but evil Ledroptha Curtain.

Plot Summary

Reynard "Reynie" Muldoon is an orphan at the Stonetown Orphanage, an exceptionally smart child tutored by a kind woman named Miss Perumal. He reads a mysterious advertisement in the newspaper calling children who have extraordinary talent to take a test that is being hosted nearby. At the facility, he takes two rounds of testing, and is the only one in the room each time to pass - which he does easily by reading between the lines and figuring out the puzzles involved as well as refusing an offer to cheat. Invited to go to another facility to continue testing, he meets George "Sticky" Washington, a timid boy with an extraordinary gift for memory which he used to pass the tests. During the final two physical tests, he meets Kate Wetherall, an athletic and resourceful girl with a large bucket of objects, and Constance Contraire, a diminutive girl with a very defiant personality and a gift for wit, especially considering her minuscule size. All four children are also revealed to either have no parents or (in the case of Sticky, a runaway) to have been estranged from them.

All four children pass the tests and meet Mr. Benedict, the leader of the organization that led the tests. He then shows them a television, playing news about a looming Emergency that is plaguing the country at large, and uses a device to reveal a secret signal that is being broadcast with the TV transmission, the voice of a young children giving cryptic messages. He tells them that these signals are coming from the Learning Institute for the Very Enlightened (L.I.V.E.), a mysterious organization nearby that also attracts young gifted children, and they have been transmitting for the past few years. Believing that these transmissions were causing the illusion of the Emergency, and wanting evidence for his findings, he had administered these tests to organize a group of children to infiltrate the Institute, which the four children leave to do the next day.

The four children quickly discover the Institute to be a cryptic organization that relies on illusions, such as the lack of rules. Much of the curriculum taught is cryptic and nonsensical - including the cryptic messages in the secret signals - and relies on memorization. They also discover a hierarchy of Executives, older students who run the Institute, and Messengers, slightly younger students with special privileges, "special recruit" students who have been kidnapped but have no recollection of being abducted, and Helpers, mindwiped adults who mindlessly work at the Institute. In addition, they discover the institute to be run by Ledroptha Curtain, Mr. Benedict's long lost identical twin. All of this information is transmitted back via Morse Code to Mr. Benedict through his agents Rhonda, Number Two, and Milligan who are stationed in a forest across the sea from the Institute, watching with a telescope.

Through espionage, they discover that Curtain exerts much of his power through devices that interface directly with the brain. Helpers are government agents who were "brainswept" (given total amnesia) and the "special recruits" and former Messengers were given lacunar amnesia in order to forget their kidnappings or Messenger privileges, respectively. They also learn that a device called the Whisperer is transmitting the signals, and also see that Curtain is increasing the power of the thought transmissions it emits so that it no longer has to rely on other signals. They discover that Mr. Curtain's plan is to soothe the fear created by the Emergency, by using his Whisperer. In addition, Constance begins to hear the voices of individual Messengers during transmission. In order to gain the evidence they need, the children decide that they must become Messengers, and Reynie and Sticky, who know the answers, help let Kate and Constance see their answers, in order to gain the traction they need. Reynie and Sticky eventually become Messengers, which allows them each bi-weekly sessions with the Whisperer. These sessions are where the messages are transmitted, and they are also very euphoric to the Messengers involved.

However, eventually both of them are caught as Agents and are sentenced to brainsweeping. With Mr. Curtain nearing total domination and the children in imminent danger, Milligan, who was captured, escapes and finds Kate being harmed by Jackson and Jillson. He then alerts Mr. Benedict, who comes with his agents to the Institute. While Constance stalls for time by stubbornly telling the brainsweeper that she is not, in fact, herself, Reynie figures out that by making Mr. Curtain angry he could make him fall asleep, as he has narcolepsy triggered by feelings of intense anger. Reynie begins taunting Mr. Curtain, and combined with other tactics by the children to increase his anger, Curtain's narcolepsy triggers and he falls asleep. Soon, Mr. Benedict arrives and destroys the Whisperer by taking control of it, stopping the signals and Mr. Curtain's empire.

In the end, Ms. Perumal adopts Reynie, Kate finds her long lost father (who is revealed to be Milligan), Sticky's parents finally find him, and Constance agrees to be adopted by Mr. Benedict (who also adopted Number Two and Rhonda.) It is also discovered by the crew that Constance is only about three years old, explaining her crankiness and exhaustion over simple things. The story ends with a snowball match between Rhonda, Sticky and Constance against Reynie and Kate.

Characters

Main Characters

Supporting Characters

Antagonists

Critical reception

The Mysterious Benedict Society has received generally positive reviews. Many of the critics praised the enigmatic plot and puzzles included in the storyline; Michele Norris, writing for the Guardian, said, "Almost everything inside this book is an enigma."[1] Additionally, the ethical decisions and moral lessons contained within the book were praised. Kirkus Review said that the book was "rich in moral and ethical issues."[2]

Awards

The Mysterious Benedict Society was a New York Times bestseller in 2007 and won the Booklist Editors' Choice: Books for Youth award in 2007, the Notable Children's Books award in 2008, and the Texas Lone Star Books award in August 2013.

Sequels

Two sequels (the second and third books in the series) were published in 2008 and 2009: The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey and The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Prisoner's Dilemma.

A prequel, The Extraordinary Education of Nicholas Benedict, was released on April 10, 2012. [3]

See also

References

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