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The Mt. Monadnock Blues

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Just turned forty and living alone, Tim Bannon is sliding comfortably into midlife crisis when his orphaned niece and nephew arrive on his doorstep. Though Tim loves these two children, he has his doubts about being in loco parentis. For starters, he is gay and the year is 1990—long before the age of gay buddies on primetime TV. 1990 is a time of terror, a time when even perfectly nice people fear they will die from touching a gay friend. If they have one. Nor is it clear that Tim’s surviving sister, Erica, and her husband, Earl, are perfectly nice people. Sexy, flaky, undirected Erica and redneck, unapologetically reactionary Earl (who, Tim is sure, shoots his dogs to simplify summer travel plans) have their own doubts about Tim’s fitness, and they enjoin a New Hampshire court to take the kids from him. As Tim marshals friends, colleagues, lawyers, and shrinks (Bannon’s Queer Army of the Republic) to do battle against Earl and his folksy lawyer Merle, The Mt. Monadnock Blues draws us deeper into an edgy, moving, and often hilarious family tale, played out against the backdrop of a glorious New England summer.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 13, 2003
      Duberstein (The Handsome Sailor
      ) explores an unconventional custody battle in a sensitive novel about a gay man who is made a sudden parent by tragedy. Tim Bannon is a 40-ish Boston travel agent whose evening with a blind date ends when state troopers knock on his door; they're delivering Bannon's beloved niece and nephew, whose parents have just been killed by a drunk driver. Bannon proves surprisingly adept at emergency parenting, and despite his misgivings about being named the primary caretaker in his sister Jill's will, he quickly comes to relish his chance to raise Billy, 11, and Cynthia, 8, who obviously love their "Unk." Family conflict enters the picture when his sister Erica's redneck, homophobic husband, Earl Sanderson, outs Bannon to his aging mother and pushes to contest the will. Duberstein keeps a close lens on Bannon's emotional ups and downs, but also introduces an abundance of characters and reaches back to the family's Carolina roots to complement (and sometimes slow up) the primary plot. Though there's more than a touch of sentimentality here, Duberstein's scenes are often poignant and funny. The surprise ending, however, strains credibility and falls flat when the author introduces a new, underdeveloped set of characters into the final child-care solution. But Bannon is a sympathetic protagonist, and Duberstein's probing examination of a thorny issue makes this a solid sixth novel.

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  • English

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