Julian is lost, aimless in his twenties and unsure what his next step in life will be. His roommate has just moved out, his girlfriend has broken up with him and his liberal parents have not been enthusiastic when he he had suggested moving back home. But they have a suggestion. His grandmother, in her nineties, is living in Los Angles with a friend and a giant St. Bernard dog. She has fallen and broken her arm. Why doesn't he go visit her and help her during her recuperation?
Julian grudgingly agrees. He gets to LA and settles in with the two ancient women and then disaster strikes. Covid closes down the country and he is now stuck in LA for the foreseeable future until the closedown lifts. Mamie had come to LA when she was eleven with her Jewish parents as they escaped the Nazis before they attacked Vienna. Her father was a composer and they easily fit in with the refuge population who had come to the United States. Mamie was taught tennis by composer Arnold Schoenberg, she knew Christopher Isherwood and Thomas Mann. She had a relationship with Greta Garbo who was the most beautiful woman in the world. She has plenty of stories to last through the shutdown.
Cathleen Schine is an American author who has written several novels that explore family relationships. In this one, she has created interesting characters in Mamie and her live-in help and in Julian as he navigates early adulthood and finding his purpose in life. Grandparents and their grandchildren have a special relationship that is different than that of parents and children and often grandchildren are willing to take advice from grandparents that they ignore from parents. Readers will learn about Los Angles during World War II and the refuge population that came there to work. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.





























