<p><em>Benjamin Franklin &amp; The Vanishing Messenger </em>is the concluding novel in a trilogy of historical detective stories featuring Franklin America's most versatile and consequential genius.&nbsp;He was a research scientist whose findings on the nature of electricity were compared to those of Isaac Newton on gravity.&nbsp;He was also the only American to sign all three instruments of America's independence from the British Empire: the Declaration of Independence the American military treaty with France and the peace treaty with Britain.&nbsp;As if that wasn't enough versatility he was an ingenious inventor for whose Glass Harmonica both Mozart and Beethoven composed music.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because a detective uses a methodology similar to that of a scientist: gathering information on which to base an hypothesis in order to test it it was natural to imagine Franklin in the role of a detective.&nbsp;As governor of Pennsylvania Franklin hosted the Convention that wrote the U.S. Constitution and got it to agree that preventing leaks was imperative to the success of the Convention.&nbsp;The main feature of the security system he invented was that no delegate to it could put in writing any of its proceeding.&nbsp;But in this novel one delegate does write a letter that is full of sensitive information on the Convention's proceedings and the messenger he pays to deliver his letter to another delegate vanishes.&nbsp;&nbsp;George Washington the Convention's president learns of this threatening development and confidentially consults those who've had the most to do with organizing the Convention--Franklin James Madison and Alexander Hamilton--to see how the missing messenger and what he carried might be found.&nbsp;Franklin volunteers to try to repair this breech in the security system with the help of his trusted assistant in the two previous detective stories Captain James Jamison.&nbsp;<em>Benjamin Franklin &amp; The Vanishing Messenger</em> is the story of that investigation.</p>