Imagine having a demanding, upper-class homophobic mother called Sophie who turns up unexpectedly, right on the weekend you have to help your lesbian friends move house. What are you going to do? … Let her help, of course. Accordingly, Kade, the main character, brings Sophie along, so that both of them can help her friends move house. In all this, Sophie is the one who does most of the learning, which happens because of a mixture of observing a wonderfully friendly family just being them and because of listening to Grace, mother of one of the two lovelies moving in together.
What makes this story so wonderful is not only the interaction between the different characters, but also the moments when Sophie and Grace talk. Grace is a wonderful, wise woman, and she says all the right things in the right moment, to get Sophie thinking. It is wonderful to see how these dialogues, and Sophie’s own observations about women just being happy together, let her have thoughts she has not had before.
I loved the characters, how lively and friendly they were, the plot, too, the positive message, … and I would have loved this to go on for much longer. 5 out of 5 stars