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8 Reviews
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Why Isn't She A Star?
Maybe Seidel has just never been promoted sufficiently by her publisher. That's the only reason I can come up with for why she is such a well kept secret from readers. I discovered her by word-of-mouth online from a big reader in Texas, Kitty, and have read everything since then that Seidel pens. I even found her out-of-print books and bought and read those. Her books...
Published on February 12, 2002 by carol irvin

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Different than the others
I own all of Kathleen Gilles Seidel's books so you can consider me a fan. I don't read any other romance authors these days except Seidel, and I eagerly awaited her latest book. However, I did not find "Please Remember This" as enthralling as her previous ones. (I gave it to a friend without any editiorial comments and she felt the same way.) Usually Seidel's books have...
Published on August 14, 2002 by mysteryreader07


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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Why Isn't She A Star?, February 12, 2002
This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
Maybe Seidel has just never been promoted sufficiently by her publisher. That's the only reason I can come up with for why she is such a well kept secret from readers. I discovered her by word-of-mouth online from a big reader in Texas, Kitty, and have read everything since then that Seidel pens. I even found her out-of-print books and bought and read those. Her books are fairly quiet. There are no murders to solve, for example, as there are in seemingly the vast majority of today's fiction. So she makes up for it by coming up with highly original plots and characterizations. This novel is set in Kansas and involves a young woman who is the daughter of a famous, dead, counter culture author. Her mother is still so read and revered that her fans congregate together to worship her work in her writing situs in Kansas. The daughter wants no part of this adulation, especially since her mother was a suicide when she was just a newborn. Obtaining at long last though a financial settlement from her mother's publisher, she sets up a business in that very small town and comes into the lives of its permanent residents. The other main character is a young man who is digging up a boat that went down a century earlier. It carried cargo from all of their families. A local historical society is being formed by his brother for this excavation's results. The brother isn't being altruistic. The town needs a major shot in the arm for economic rejuvenation. I found this so absorbing that I could not put it down. Plus it was set in a very different yet fascinating locale with a splendid, believable romance at its center involving the two lead characters. You can't go wrong discovering Seidel if she's been kept a secret from you too.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Women's fiction at its best!, February 17, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
Once again, Seidel has delivered a beautifully written story filled with strong, likeable, believable characters. This one, like her others, is about family and healing and the importance of love--in all its permutations and complexities. The premise is immediately intriguing, and it continues to be fascinating as the plot unfolds, all the way to the end. I especially loved the setting and how real the small midwestern town and its inhabitants all seemed. My one problem with the book is in no way a criticism of it or of the author: I don't know why Seidel's publishers put "romance" on the spine of this book when it just isn't. Yes, there is a romance in it--and a good one, too--but the main point of the book is the heroine's inner search for resolution and meaning in her life. Along the way, she finds a new career, answers to mysteries that have colored her existence, friends, community, and love. The story is hers, and if readers know to expect that, they won't be disappointed.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Different than the others, August 14, 2002
This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
I own all of Kathleen Gilles Seidel's books so you can consider me a fan. I don't read any other romance authors these days except Seidel, and I eagerly awaited her latest book. However, I did not find "Please Remember This" as enthralling as her previous ones. (I gave it to a friend without any editiorial comments and she felt the same way.) Usually Seidel's books have plots in them that I can relate to but this one was not one of them. I have yet to even re-read this book, and I've practically worn out her previous titles!
I keep trying to figure out why this book was not as satisfying as Seidel's usually excellent books (even the Harlequins were a cut above...). Perhaps it was the ghostly elements? Perhaps it was the tie-in with the actual Steamboat Arabia that I've recently visited in Kansas City? Perhaps it was just that this book was trying to mesh together too many threads to connect the past and present. I recommend ALL of Seidel's previous books; they are truly worth a visit to a new or used bookstore site. Save this one for last or wait for her next one, I bet it will be great.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointingly Plain Fiction, June 23, 2002
By 
C. Byers (Sacramento, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
The basic story line of this book sounds exciting, but it never fulfills its promise. If you enjoy reading about all the details of who does what in a small town (and I mean lots of them) then you might enjoy this one as a casual read. I thought all the details detracted from the action to the point of becoming tedious at times. Worse, the novel was populated with characters that never came alive for me. All those who live outside the conventional American way of life are portrayed as irresponsible, selfish, wierdos in what I thought was a rather mean, small-minded way. Meanwhile, those who righteously pursue the usual American Dream accomplish the impossible with amazing industry, competence, and style. How can one really believe in such people? They have no depth to them, nothing one can identify with. Their thoughts and their struggles are superficial, and trivialize everything that happens in the book. The final revelations are like afterthoughts, and fail to excite.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Mediocre From a Talented Writer, June 19, 2011
This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
I really like this author and have read a lot of her other work. However, this novel was a disappointment: the heroine is insipid and passive (she's the daughter of a famous novelist with a cult following but it never even occurs to her to wonder why she and the grandparents who raised her don't have any money from her mother's work?) and the subplot about the raised riverboat is too factual to really serve as a plot point for character growth. The timing of the events at the end also felt really rushed and contrived. IMHO, the relatively minor "father" character was the best one in the book.

Take my advice and read _Summer's End_ by this author instead (highly recommended), or _More Than You Dreamed_, or _Again_.
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5.0 out of 5 stars two fascinating stories intertwined, January 1, 2008
By 
Caroline Lamb (Santa Cruz, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
I can't believe anyone found this book boring! Two stories wrap around each other. One is the story of Tess Lanier, daughter of famous writer Nina Lane--a mother she never knew. Raised by elderly grandparents, Tess' whole life has been about not being demanding, emotional and brilliant like her mother. When her grandparents die, Tess keeps a promise to go back to the small town in Kansas where they lived before the Depression, and where her famous mother lived.

The second story, and maybe even better, is about a man determined to dig up an old riverboat, sunk before the Civil War, and the town rallying around his efforts, striving for an economic revival. I've lived in a small town that lost its center, and I found the efforts to save the town fascinating. Even more interesting was the boat itself, and the stories of the people whose lives were forever changed when it sank.

Of course there's a romance, and it's a slow, gentle romance. I have no patience with "love at first sight"--I like people to get to know and understand each other, as they do here. Tess has to come to terms with her mother's legacy before she feels free to love and be loved.

This isn't a thrilling book. No murders. No car chases. No sex scenes. Just delightful, well-developed characters, a more interesting than average setting, and a great story.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars powerful emotion-laden contemporary romance, February 7, 2002
This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
Suffering from manic depression, Nina Lane could not cope with her sudden fame as a must read science fiction writer. Nina commits suicide three months after she gives birth to Tess. Her maternal grandparents raise the infant as far way from the Nina nonsense as possible.

About twenty-four years later with her grandparents who raised her dead and feeling all alone, Tess decides to find out about her maternal heritage. She returns to her birth town of Fleur-de-lis, Kansas where she decides to open up a coffee and gift shop. Ned Ravenal sees his dreams about to occur as he leads the excavation of the Western Settler, a riverboat that sunk in the Missouri in 1857, but because of a river shift is currently buried under a corn field. When Ned and Tess meet, an attraction transpires between them. Since both are preoccupied and neither able to see the flying sparks between them, a relationship appears doubtful even if they fall in love.

PLEASE REMEMBER THIS has all that fans of Kathleen Gilles Seidel expect with the novel containing strong prose, deep characters, and a powerful story line. However, this reviewer feels discontented in spite of a well-written book because the plot focuses on Tess' needs to discover the essence of her mother rather than the more fascinating Western Settler (past and present) as its core theme. Still, you can't always get what you want and Ms. Seidel does provide fans with a powerful emotion-laden contemporary romance.

Harriet Klausner

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3 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Last Resort, February 8, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Please Remember This (Mass Market Paperback)
Read this book only if you have nothing else to read! Both the characters and dialog are boring. I cared less about the characters after I read it than before I started. The author does capture the feel of small towns, but without interesting characters who wants to read about small towns! If you can't sleep, this is the book to pick up.
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Please Remember This
Please Remember This by Kathleen Gilles Seidel (Mass Market Paperback - Feb. 2002)
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