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james gilbert
Author
REUNION BY THE LAKE
Richard Collins knew he had only a short time to live, and it was vital to inform his three sons. But beyond he news of his impending death, he needed them to grasp the significance of his will and how it would continue to shape their lives, even after his passing. Gathered in the house by the lake, Richard anticipated the disclosure of his final wishes would be a solemn affair. However, he couldn't predict the tumultuous reaction each son would have to his revelation. In this painfully revealing novel about a family accustomed to deferring to one man's authority, the last moments with Richard are filled with grief and turmoil. Grace, his wife, and each of his sons must grapple with the terms of their legacy. Their responses not only expose their individual characters but also lay bare the complex and strained dynamic that has long kept this troubled family on edge.
Reviews
Gilbert’s latest work (after his Amanda Pennyworth series) chronicles the last days of Richard Collins and his dysfunctional family of three sons—Seth, Deck, and Nick—along with his wife, Grace. Time is limited, and Richard is determined to make one last bid to inspire his sons to success, but his modus operandi—an exclusionary will that donates most of his considerable wealth to sources other than his sons—leaves the family reeling. When Richard gathers his offspring together, undercurrents run high, and, after revealing his will’s contents, he collapses, leading to his hospitalization and further deterioration—a development that plunges the family into a jumble of bickering, resentment, and, ultimately, a form of redemption.

Gilbert’s prose deftly captures the complexities of the family’s fraught relationships, forging relatable friction that brings their underlying dynamics into the spotlight. Grace, forced to cope not just with a terminally ill husband but also with regret at having allowed herself to live a limited life, treads the dangerous waters of rebellion against what she views as her husband’s unreasonable decisions, while each son’s perspective paints a different side of a domineering, rigid father, insistent that his children learn to manage their own lives, even as he refuses to be sent to “a house of the dying” when his health becomes too challenging to manage at home.

Reunion by the Lake favors the slow burn of family discord over more defined climactic scenes, and readers may wonder at the childhood incidents that led to the family’s fractured relationships as adults. Still, their frayed bonds are engrossing, marked by complex mindscapes and intricate layers of mistrust, bitterness, and self-pity that lend the narrative a tremulous feel. Though eruption feels just around the corner in nearly every scene, Gilbert chooses to end the story on a more positive note, leaving readers with a hopeful antidote in contrast to the novel’s smoldering beginnings.

Takeaway: Family dysfunction takes center stage when a dying father discloses his will.

Comparable Titles: Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney’s The Nest, Jami Attenberg’s The Middlesteins.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A

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