|
July 04, 2008
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Old Boyfriends by Rexanne Becnel | Reviewed by Harriet Klausner |  | Publisher: Next
http://www.harlequin.ca
ISBN: 0373230362
Genre: Fiction
Subgenre: Psychological
Release date: Aug 2005
Format: paperback
Pages: 304
Price: $5.50
| In Southern California everyone pays respect to the “great” man; but his widow, Mary Jane “MJ” Hollander, knows her bisexual spouse’s final breath was on the round bed of a “pseudowoman”. While his adult kids and their spouses salivate over the inheritance, MJ makes it through the platitudes and the sushi served by her stepson only because her two best friends, Cat and Bitsey, are truly there for her.
The three transplanted southern amigos get together to help MJ with her grief and discuss the men in their lives, including the one that memory serves as being their ideal mate. Bitsey is married to her lord and master, Jack Albertson, who never appreciates her efforts; because if he didn’t do the chore, then it is not perfect; however, he never does it with her nor helps with their Stepford kids. Cat has less patience with the lesser gender than her friends, having two divorces under her belt. Sick of selfish perfection, avaricious stepchildren, and failing husbands, the trio agree to visit each one’s hunk that got away to see if the memories match the realities or their dead, ex-, and living husbands.
Though middle-aged female buddies star, Old Boyfriends is an amusing coming-of-age relationship drama. The three women learn about themselves during their often comic escapades as they realize how much their behavior as individuals and as a trio impact on their rapport with others. Though the fine storyline lacks a specific center to hold the tale together, due to the constant rotation of perspective, fans of a jocular tale with a moral “to thine own self be true” will hitch a ride in the Jag. | | |
|