In his late sixties Uncle Ralph, the confirmed bachelor and raunchy womanizer, is marrying a neighbor he met at the retirement community only a month earlier. Has he found his twin soul or lost his geriatric mind?
During her lavish lunch overlooking Plymouth Harbor Dorothea Winthrop got an oil stain on her Anne Fontain, Paris original, three-hundred-dollar blouse. But that’s just the beginning of her predicament.
Well-intentioned friends worry that Ned Barstow intends to blow his brains out with a high-powered rifle, but the elderly widower just wants to go back to nature.
Hattie Mae Jackson, the black cleaning lady at the community mental health clinic is going to give the psychologist, Dr. Morton, unsolicited advice about managing one of his more troublesome mental patients.
Seventy-three year-old Grandma Heidegger recently killed a man in the alleyway behind Duggan’s Pharmacy. The feisty woman, who concealed the 38 caliber Ruger in a ‘flash, bang’ bra holster, harbors no regrets, no remorse.
Lucas Weston just stole a beagle puppy and feels perfectly comfortable giving it as an early Christmas gift to his granddaughter.
Kimberly Weston is a financial planner with a six-figure income, while Kurt Salinger is a college dropout who waits tables for chump change and tips. Kimberly and Kurt are twin souls.
Alice Brown, who lived in rural New Hampshire in the late eighteen hundreds, was a world-class, American writer.
Leslie Holbrook just insulted Yvonne Blackstone and trash talked her husband. As if that wasn’t bad enough, Leslie is also eating both her meal and that of her friend who just fled the ritzy, gourmet restaurant.
Zora Hurston had a reverence for language, treating words as though they were a cherished gift from God. So why was the American author buried in a pauper’s, unmarked grave?
Doris Abernathy’s boyfriend is cheating on her. So why does she seek advice from Nathan Rosenblatt, a Hassidic Jew who works in the local supermarket and talks in parables?
Max Tittlebaum, a dedicated English teacher, may lose his job due a relationship with a two-hundred year-old French prostitute.
Elliot Slotnick is dating Marilyn Moneghan, his chiropractor’s assistant. He’s a neurotic Jew and nerdy academic; she is a devout Catholic, who believes in divine intervention and watches Wheel of Fortune reruns on late-night television.
Fourteen year-old Cheryl Oliphant’s best friend is a four-foot, South American tree boa and her parents are getting divorced. On the plus side, Cheryl just met Teddy Rasmussen who offered her a sympathetic ear.
Most people imagine Donny Cantrell a modern-day Don Juan, a devil-may-care Lothario, but first impressions can be deceiving if not dead wrong.