Retired school teacher Colette Corbyn goes kicking and screaming into assisted living, when she has planned to live out her days in the privacy of her own home. As she begrudgingly settles into Shady Meadow, she makes an unlikely friend, Margaret, who claims the Women’s Movement demeaned women. A loud, obnoxious neighbor, Dottie, seems to be off her rocker, but she’s actually addicted to opioids and has an alarming secret life. Best-selling novelist Susan Hartley, afflicted with Alzheimer’s, doesn’t recognize her latest book, and becomes violent when she mistakes Colette for her sister.

 

Colette struggles to come to terms with her sometimes contentious daughter Brooke and seeks a relationship with her grandson Carter, long lost down the rabbit hole of QAnon. Colette thinks she is done with romance until she meets Harry, who suffers from AMD and can only read music through a magnifying glass. As Colette and Harry share their love of piano playing, Colette discovers complications in his life which may prevent their relationship from enduring. With compassion and wit, Lynch demonstrates that old age has its perks, and, nearing the end, every day is worth living to its fullest.

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Click cover to order on Amazon.

This is a sad-funny novel about a music professor and his mid-life crisis, his Polynesian lover and her son Moopuna, a tone deaf, marathon-running ex-nun, and one slightly hysterical stigmatic.

Click cover to order on Amazon.

Click cover to order on Amazon.

These stories, mostly about musicians, were previously published in The New Yorker, The Baltimore Review, Fiction Writers’ Network, Writers’ Forum, Confrontation, Oasis, and Tribute to Orpheus.