cover image Saving Grandma

Saving Grandma

Frank Schaeffer. Berkley Publishing Group, $23 (368pp) ISBN 978-0-425-15776-3

Thirteen-year-old Calvin Becker gets all the best lines in this irreverent, amusing sequel to Schaeffer's 1992 Portofino. Like that novel, this one follows the adventures of the Becker family, Presbyterian missionaries, as they try to convert the people of ""Pagan Europe"" in the late 1960s. Hapless, accident-prone Calvin, confused by the twin adolescent terrors of sex and the Foreknowledge/Predestination debate, finds his life complicated further when foul-mouthed, chronically sacrilegious Grandma breaks her hip and moves in with the family. While his father goes increasingly insane, Calvin emerges from erotic daydreams about his English pen-pal Jennifer long enough to form an unholy alliance with Grandma and to run off seeking the counsel of an aging Italian painter (befriended in the first book). Schaeffer's slapstick jokes and often tender evocations of youth make for an uneasy but entertaining cross between Portnoy's Complaint and TV's The Wonder Years. His nuanced characterization of Calvin--part malicious prankster, part helpless victim of his absurd family--breathes life into the stock ensemble cast and heavy-handed religious satire. (Sept.)