The Golden Boy
| The Golden Boy | |
| A novel by Patricia Finn | |
| Author | Patricia Finn |
| Country | Canada |
| Language | English |
| Genre | Literary fiction |
| Publisher | Grand Central Publishing |
| Publication date | March 10, 2026 |
| ISBN | 978-1-5387-7618-6 |
The Golden Boy is a debut novel by Canadian author Patricia Finn, published on March 10, 2026, by Grand Central Publishing. The novel follows Stafford Hopkins, a retired television executive, whose carefully constructed life is upended when a letter from the past forces him to confront long-buried guilt, estranged friendships, and the possibility of redemption. It received a starred review from Kirkus Reviews and blurbs from authors including Richard Russo and Elin Hilderbrand.
Plot
Stafford Hopkins, a Canadian-born television executive, has been pushed into an involuntary retirement after a high-profile career in Hollywood. He retreats with his wife, Agnes, to their luxury estate in Maui — one of several homes the couple own — where both are grimly resigned to a life of gilded exile. Their marriage, spanning three decades, is characterized by sparring wit and an exhaustion that has gradually displaced intimacy.
A letter arrives bearing shocking news: Stafford has been named legal guardian of four children he never knew existed — the grandchildren of his late childhood friend, Bobby Shepherd, whose son has died in a car crash. Stafford, who has spent decades suppressing the memory of Bobby and a dark secret from their shared past, is forced to return to the rural farming community in Canada where they grew up.
The novel moves between the present — approximately ten days in March 2003 — and extended flashbacks to Stafford and Bobby's boyhood. Agnes, meanwhile, undergoes her own reckoning with buried chapters of her past. The narrative concludes with Stafford accepting responsibility for the children and arriving at an unexpected reconciliation with his own history.
Characters
- Stafford Hopkins — The novel's central protagonist; a Canadian-born former network television executive carrying a lifelong burden of guilt relating to Bobby Shepherd.
- Agnes Hopkins — Stafford's wife of over thirty years; American, sharp-tongued, and possessed of a troubled background she has largely kept hidden.
- Bobby Shepherd — Stafford's deceased childhood best friend, whose memory haunts the novel throughout.
- Callie Hopkins — The only child of Stafford and Agnes; a grown woman whom both parents acknowledge they raised poorly.
- The Four Children — The grandchildren of Bobby Shepherd, one of whom is identified as neurodivergent, whose sudden guardianship is the novel's inciting event.
Themes
The Golden Boy engages with several interlocking themes:
- Guilt and memory — How a single unresolved act can govern a person's identity and relationships for decades.
- Marriage and estrangement — Stafford and Agnes's long war of attrition, in which genuine feeling has been buried beneath habit and mutual disappointment.
- Redemption and second chances — Both protagonists are offered an opportunity, through the children's arrival, to reorient themselves toward something more meaningful.
- Philosophical inquiry — Finn draws on her academic background in Aristotle and Athenian tragedy; the Nicomachean Ethics is referenced directly, and the novel employs a structural logic reminiscent of classical drama.
- Class and identity — Stafford's working-class Canadian origins exist in tension with his American wealth; Agnes's impoverished and illegitimate upbringing similarly complicates her self-constructed persona.
Reception
Kirkus Reviews awarded the novel a starred review, describing it as "a tale of second chances delivered with wit and heart." Booklist recommended it to readers of Elizabeth Strout and Richard Russo, praising its "quiet, bittersweet" sensibility. People called it "an uproarious and poignant exploration of midlife reckoning." The British Columbia Review praised its "engaging storytelling, excellent pacing, and clever writing."
Publishers Weekly offered a more measured assessment, acknowledging Finn's convincing portrayal of the Hopkinses' marriage while finding the plotting somewhat listless and the revelations delayed.
Blurbs
- Richard Russo (Empire Falls) described the novel as "not just an astoundingly ambitious novel, but also a wildly entertaining one, by turns hilarious and heartbreaking."
- Grant Ginder (The People We Hate at the Wedding) called it "miraculous — an immersive, profoundly moving story about friendship, marriage, betrayal, and redemption."
- Elin Hilderbrand (Swan Song) described it as "extraordinary," praising it as "both a love story and a family drama, where the past gives purpose to the present action."
About the author
Patricia Finn is a writer, ghostwriter, editor, and consultant with a background in non-fiction, episodic television, and feature film, including adaptations of work by Alice Munro and Carol Shields. She completed postgraduate study in English and Classics with a focus on Aristotle and Athenian tragedy. She holds both Canadian and American roots and lives in Vancouver, British Columbia. The Golden Boy is her debut novel.
Publication
The Golden Boy was published in hardcover on March 10, 2026, by Grand Central Publishing (ISBN 978-1-5387-7618-6). A paperback edition was published under Cardinal Publishing (ISBN 978-1-5387-7621-6). An audiobook edition narrated by Jason Culp was released simultaneously. The book was represented by agent Hilary McMahon of Westwood Creative Artists.
See also
References
External links
- The Golden Boy at Goodreads
- Review at Kirkus Reviews
- Review at Book Marks
- Publisher page at Cardinal Publishing