It has been several years since Patrick O’Hara left his TV sitcom and retired to Palm Springs. All is peaceful routine for Patrick, who is gay, until his sister-in-law (and bosom friend) dies and his brother checks himself into rehab, leaving Patrick in charge of his nine-year-old niece and six-year-old nephew. Maisie and Grant know their uncle is gay, thus the moniker
guncle. In the tradition of Auntie Mame and
Travels with My Aunt, this latest from Rowley (
Lily and the Octopus) explores the relationships between young and old, grief and acceptance, stagnation and growth—all while challenging the expectations of convention. Under Patrick’s unorthodox tutelage, the children are exposed to an entirely new way of looking at life, while Patrick, through the agency of his niece and nephew, finally comes to grips with his own grief. Influenced by comic dialogue that would make Neil Simon jealous, the novel’s serious undercurrent of loss gives way, in the end, to a warmth that will make readers smile.
VERDICT A funny, gentle tale of family and friends, and a salve for the wounds they often cause.
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