Jon Hassler returns one more time to the small Minnesota town of Staggerford, allowing his readers a last visit with his remarkable creation, Agatha McGee. Even at the age of 87 retired schoolteacher and dyed-in-the-wool spinster Agatha thinks that a retirement home is out of the question. But when an ice storm reveals her helplessness, she moves out of her house to the Sunset Senior center. She quickly learns that living with other senior citizens does not put an end to misadventures. Soon, she is dealing with an spurned lover, an attempted kidnapping, and the need to exhume a body. There's never a dull moment to Hassler's irrepressible heroine.
Hassler's strength as a novelist was always his ability to draw well-rounded but sympathetic portraits of small-town characters. Agatha McGee is probably his most well-known example. From her first appearance in 1977, she has been a difficult person. She sets high standards for her students, has strong opinions and preferences that she is not afraid to share, and judges her fellow citizens somewhat mercilessly. And yet, she is sympathetic. We love her and are rooting for her. I attribute this to Hassler's ability to show us her heart. He reveals to us the forces - of religion, time, loneliness - that have shaped her into what she is, and because of this we forgive some of her harder edges. We also see her self-doubt, a topic which has been explored some in other novels too (e.g. Dear James), and this allows us to take her bravado and forcefulness with a grain of salt.
The comedic episodes in this book are probably as good as any Hassler wrote in his career. This novel served, for me, as a sort of book-end to both Simon's Night, an earlier book about retirement living, and Staggerford, the tale that started it all. If I have any complaints, it may be that the ending of this story feels a bit less realistic than some of Hassler's greatest novels and moves toward the sentimental and cloying. On the other hand, after a dozen novels and 30 years in this town, maybe he has earned his happy ending.
If you've enjoyed the other Staggerford books by Hassler, do yourself a favor and make one last trip to this quirky little town. I don't think you'll regret it.