I got this book because I am one of those tourists who love Fredericksburg, TX, with it's German quaintness and shopping and beer and brats, all in the middle of Texas! Boy, this book makes me think of it differently! I know, it's fiction, so I'm taking it all with a grain of salt, but the story was so well written and deals with so many current issues in such a realistic way: small town living, fear of change, racism, cancer, parenting, doping, relationships, justice and trying to do the right thing.
The main character, Beck, returns home to Texas after 24 years away. He escaped after high school and never intended on coming back. He got a football scholarship to Notre Dame a became a successful lawyer in Chicago. But he returns home because his wife dies of cancer and he cannot maintain the lawyer career and all the billable hours that entails as well as being a single parent who actually raises their kids, a boy and girl. He comes home to his father who he hasn't spoken to in all those years away.
Giminez does a great job weaving in all of Beck's relationships-- realizing how much his career took precious time away from his family and what kind of marriage he really had, rebuilding relationships with his kids, dealing with grief and guilt, rebuilding a relationship with his father, old friends and new, and relearning the town he grew up in and starting a new career. The flow was a little awkward at some points, but nothing that detracted from the story and I found the humor in the conversations enjoyable.
Beck ends up becoming the county judge and struggles over doing the right thing and a reoccurring theme of what justice is and what it means to other people runs throughout. The choices he makes are not easy and end up affecting the people around him and the whole town. As in real life, there are no black & white answers. I appreciate how the different stories played out and even though I didn't get the big climactic bang with the typical Hollywood ending where justice prevails, an ending that I usually crave, this was just as satisfying. Instead of everything tying up nice and neat there were different ends, subtly giving satisfaction in their own ways that were just right for this story. I couldn't put it down and am already looking for another Gimmenez book to pick up.