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Reviewed by Lisa McCombs for Readers' Favorite
David Foley’s life is exactly where he needs it to be, regardless of the untimely death of his only son. With the upcoming birth of his only grandchild, David can comfortably move to be closer to his daughter-in-law and her baby. He has nothing and no one to claim his attention and his time. Then the unspeakable happens and David has to make the ultimate decision of sacrificing his freedom for the newborn. And it is the most rewarding decision he could ever hope to make. The commitment to be a single father at his age leads to some extremely interesting complications, but in the end David succeeds in raising a lovely, mature and well-rounded woman. A confirmed atheist, David surprises his friends and extended family members with his sensible and unorthodox parenting skills. Leisl learns that morality comes in many forms, and that her grandfather’s belief system may not model the religious undertones of her mother’s family; but that the grace of good deeds stands firm in both arenas.
Michael Hardesty has created a tale of two lives living under the same roof. The Grace of the Gingko reflects the reality of growing older in David’s story of youth revisited. This is a story of second chances. The Grace of the Gingko is a compelling story of unusual life events, told with honesty and unabashed self-reflection. Just as the reader assumes that all such stories have a happy ending, a new twist appears to remind us that happiness is in the imagination of that reader.