From Publishers Weekly
Three pairs of lovers compete for space at the heart of this cozy D.C. novel by Kafka-Gibbons, who won an L.A. Times book prize for his first novel, Love.Enter. Jonathan Allard and his all-but-legal-husband Peter are raising two children, the offspring of Jon's mentally unstable sister; Jon's widowed father, Bailey, a D.C. Court of Appeals judge, pines away for his housemate, Louisa, a bright young law student; and Bailey's brilliant clerk Max, a genial slob, is in love with his fellow clerk, the wealthy, pampered Eve. Not passion but domesticity and the institution of marriage are the subjects of scrutiny here. Can Bailey exorcise the ghost of his dead wife, Caroline, who talks to him in the halls of his gorgeous old D.C. brownstone? Can Eve commit to a man who tosses food and dishes in the same kitchen cupboard? Will Jon and Peter ever have a moment to themselves, in between feedings and play dates? Attending family gatherings, making trips to the supermarket and heading back and forth from work and play, Kafka-Gibbons's characters negotiate the hurdles of everyday existence albeit a comfortably affluent everyday existence. The legal underpinning of Jon and Peter's situation is spelled out in an account of a case Bailey is asked to weigh in on that of two gay men who are legally married in New Mexico and are suing to have their marriage recognized in D.C. Though Kafka-Gibbons elaborates one too many subplots, his alternative family scenarios, like those of Michael Cunningham's early novels or Stephen McCauley's light-as-air dramas, breathe sweetness and charm. 3-city author tour.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Dupont Circle, one of the most vibrant and active communities in Washington, D.C., is a place where worlds often collide. Kafka-Gibbons sets his engaging comedy of manners there, amidst a wealthy old D.C. family, whose patriarch is aging appeals court judge Bailey Allard. Bailey's son, Jon, and Jon's partner, Peter, who are, for all practical purposes, married and raising the two children of Bailey's mentally ill daughter, urge Bailey to take a young law-school student, Louisa, as a boarder in his nearly empty and cavernous old house. In the meanwhile, Bailey's court takes a gay marriage case that could change the definition of marriage in America. Then Bailey and Louisa enter into an unlikely May-December romance that surprises them as much as it does their families. Kafka-Gibbons' well-written and delightful novel illustrates, in a story that seems both extremely new and as old as love itself, how profoundly social understandings of relationships and marriage have changed in America.
Michael SpinellaCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved