Little Monsters by Adrienne Brodeur

Adam Gardner is rapidly approaching his 70th birthday, and he knows he will accomplish his life goal by then. Just wait until everyone sees what he will have discovered! It will make all of his many other achievements – and there have been a great many – seem small in comparison. He just has to adjust his meds so that he remains in this manic phase long enough to figure it all out…

Meanwhile, his children are continuing to experience the friction they’ve had between them since their youth. In spite of Ken having married his sister Abby’s best friend, Jen, they have yet to reconcile their very different values, their very different life goals. While Ken anticipates a huge financial deal that will situate him better for his run for congress, Abby is content with her quietly growing status as an artist.

At the same time, Steph, a Boston cop on vacation in Cape Cod, where the Gardners live full-time, is interested in getting to know them. Could this be her family?

With complex characters as well as a complex plot, this story is a winner – and not only because of all the Cape Cod references…! (Always appealing to me!) As Abby and Ken work toward the planned celebration of their father, Adam’s, 70th birthday, the tension builds and it is anyone’s guess how the event will play out. And it doesn’t disappoint, in my opinion. There are so many layers of conflict, so many issues needing to be resolved, and they all seem to be on a collision course.

I also feel that this is a thoughtful depiction of bipolar disorder and its ramifications. The author describes the allure of the mania so well: its intoxicating energy, the grandiose notions, the illusion of invincibility. There is also the fear of numbness, of coming down, and hitting rock bottom, which, as it says through Adam’s thoughts, can’t be described by the word “depression” alone. The narrative also reveals the impact the disease has had on Adam’s children: the fear of the swings, the not knowing which father they would be dealing with, and the abandonment they periodically experience. It is a complicated and painful disease that may impact those around the individual struggling with it.

I highly recommend this novel – it’s substantive, fun, and engaging. (And did I mention it takes place on Cape Cod?)

Sandwich by Catherine Newman

Rocky is new to this “empty nester” thing and it’s not going well. She is trying to recapture her “nest” as her family gathers for a week of vacation on Cape Cod, in the house they’ve stayed in year after year. She is thrilled she and her husband are with their son, daughter and their son’s girlfriend – and also that her parents will be joining them for a couple of days – but her feelings keep getting in the way. Why is she so angry all the time? And sad? And then remorseful? And then so full of love? It isn’t just that she’s menopausal, is it? Even while she pines for her past, she admits that it may not have been as perfect as she likes to think it was. Perhaps it is ok to live in the present.

I love the title of this novel for its very apt dual meaning. While it correctly summons the image of the quaint town that greets you as you travel over the bridge to Cape Cod, the town where the family vacation takes place, it also likely refers to the “sandwich generation” in which Rocky is a bit stunned to find herself. Rocky expends a tremendous amount of energy reminiscing about her exhausting but loving days when her children were small; on the other hand, she is also anxiously watching over her parents, who, in her mind, are suddenly gray-haired and frail. She rues the fact that her children are independent, intelligent adults, and simultaneously acknowledges that her parents now need attention they never needed before. This is a hard place to be, as there are demands still on both sides. It requires heart, humor and a great deal of tact. And while Rocky is blessed with the first two, she seems to still be working on that last one…

What is abundant here in the writing, however, is the love she feels for her family. There is so much of it that it spills over into the heart of the reader and one cannot help feeling what she feels as well. The warmth, the humor, the tender moments and goofy conversations are quite authentic and relatable. While her specific circumstances may be unique to her, the relationships are almost universal – and I feel (hope!) that many readers will relate to the characters here.

This is a fun summer read that runs deeper than one might expect.