Bancroft’s novel follows a middle-aged woman as she receives a cancer diagnosis, grows close to members of a support group, and learns about herself.
In Oakland, California in 2008, after marketing executive Liz Millanova leaves her alcoholic husband, she’s free to pursue a new relationship with her married boyfriend, Lyle. However, her new world is soon shattered when she receives a stage 1 breast cancer diagnosis that requires immediate surgery and treatment. Later, Lyle breaks up with her, and before long, she receives a stage 4 diagnosis of cancer that has spread to her bones. She finds a way to tell the terrible news to her estranged daughter, Marisa, and in her cancer support group, she connects with two other survivors, Rhonda and Dave. The trio become their own personal support group, which they call “the Oakland Mets.” After attending a baseball game, where they begin to truly bond, the three explore various parks, Alcatraz Island, and local clubs. As her relationship with her new friends deepens, Liz reflects on her own life and learns to love in a way she has never has before. Over the course of this accomplished novel, Bancroft, a cancer survivor herself, presents a realistic picture of multiple patients’ physical and emotional experiences. The work is also a fine story of platonic love, which is a relatively rare subject in fiction; the unfolding friendships are realistic and emotionally honest throughout, even when their excursions occasionally become lengthy. The main story is told from Liz’s perspective, but Bancroft presents a heartbreaking but beautiful afterword in the third person. It’s a story that follows a remarkable trajectory from loneliness and heartbreak to lasting love.
An often resonant narrative of adversity and friendship.