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The Third Act of Theo Gruene

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Pub Date May 20 2025 | Archive Date Jun 12 2025
One Mississippi Press LLC | Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA), Members' Titles

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Description

A solitary man finds his quiet world turned upside down when a precocious young girl shows up on his front porch during a thunderstorm.

Meet Theo Gruene.

Theo is a quiet man with basic needs, preferring phone calls to text messages and books to movies. As a retired, seventy-year-old botanist, he spends his days preserving ancient plant specimens for future university research. He appreciates a dependable routine and prefers solitude.

Enter Penelope.

During a spring thunderstorm, a girl Theo has never met appears at his front door. Despite an oversized lime green raincoat, the child is drenched, and her eyeglasses are rain-splattered. "Please, can I come inside? I missed my school bus by two measly minutes, I forgot my apartment key, and I don't want to be struck by lightning!" Stunned and a bit suspicious —what if she is a scammer?—Theo invites her inside. He has no idea his life will soon be unrecognizable.

Enter Ivy.

Ivy is a single parent struggling to raise Penelope alone, juggling nursing classes and a low-paying job at the local VA hospital. She's remarkable, and with such a determined spirit, Theo believes she might set the world on fire given different circumstances. He also wonders if there might be more to Ivy's story. Theo suspects everyone has at least one secret closeted away like a scratchy, ill-fitting sports coat.

Enter Covid.

As the pandemic spreads across the globe, even touching Fayetteville, Arkansas, where Theo has lived for almost four decades, Theo slowly opens his comfortable life to infinite possibilities. With an unforgettable cast of endearingly flawed characters, The Third Act of Theo Gruene is a poignant and humorous portrayal of love after loss and a joyful celebration of the human connection, even during unprecedented times. 

A solitary man finds his quiet world turned upside down when a precocious young girl shows up on his front porch during a thunderstorm.

Meet Theo Gruene.

Theo is a quiet man with basic needs...


A Note From the Publisher

ePub: 9781951418120

Hardcover: 9781951418106

ePub: 9781951418120

Hardcover: 9781951418106


Advance Praise

With lyrical prose and heartfelt storytelling, Boerner reminds us of the profound joy found in human connection, making this novel not only a compelling read but an essential one.

~ Sean Fitzgibbons, author of What Follows is True: The Crescent Hotel

The unlikely bond between seventy-year-old Theo Gruene and eight-year-old Penelope Palmer reminds us of the power of kindness and love, even during unprecedented times.

~ Matt McGowan, author of 1971 

With lyrical prose and heartfelt storytelling, Boerner reminds us of the profound joy found in human connection, making this novel not only a compelling read but an essential one.

~ Sean Fitzgibbons...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781951418113
PRICE $18.99 (USD)
PAGES 310

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Average rating from 16 members


Featured Reviews

This talented author has written a page turner. I could not out this book down. An elderly man…a sweet neighbor girl with her mother…a hopeful romantic…the recipe for a cannot put down story. Secrets…red herrings…guessing…realistic characters keep this story moving quickly. This book is unique…there are many avenues to explore….i would give this book plus five. I can’t wait for more from this author. Thanks Netgalley

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I really loved this book. A senior man lives his quiet and orderly life, until a young, precocious neighbor girl shows up, showing him that sometimes shaking up your life is the very thing you need.
Covid happens, and all of their lives are changed.

I loved the characters...all so different, all well done.

Thank you to Mississippi Press, LLC and Netgalley for a digital ARC of this title in exchange for my honest review. All opinions are my own.

#NetGalley #TheThirdActOfTheoGroene #MississippiPressLLC #TalyaTateBoerner

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A perk on NetGalley is a Read Now feature where you can get a book before its published without requesting it. I am so happy I grabbed this one -- I am still thinking about the characters since reading it! Its sweet, funny and endearing with a few plot twists that kept me enthralled.

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When Penelope appears on Theo Gruene's doorstep one morning, he has no idea how much his life is going to change, or how fast it's going to happen. Theo has experienced far more than his fair share of loss throughout his 70 years and is now quietly accepting of his pretty solitary lifestyle: going on long hikes, preserving and cataloguing plant specimens for the university and meeting his friend, Winn, for lunch on a Friday.

When Penelope turns up, Theo becomes - unwillingly at first - an important part of her life and the lives of others around them. Penelope has a way of drawing people in and making Theo confront thoughts and feelings that he has been all too content to ignore for many years.

I absolutely loved this book. Yes, it's all a bit convenient and neatly tied up at the end but it's so refreshing to read a book full of nice people, just doing their best and being kind. It isn't sickly sweet though, there are upsetting parts, particularly for anyone directly affected by loss during the COVID 19 pandemic, but it is so gently, kindly written that it doesn't feel as difficult to read as it probably could.

Throughout the book, there are references to real things and I thought this was done really effectively. Penelope talks about To Kill a Mockingbird and "Boo Radley Holes" feature heavily. With the book being set during such a significant and unusual time, I also think it would have been strange to not include certain events, such as the death of George Floyd and subsequent protests. The way that the characters react to this tells us so much about them, in a way that wouldn't work so well with a fictional event.

All in all, this is a great book and one that I couldn't put down at times. Theo and his newfound community are brilliantly written characters and a joy to spend time with.

Great for fans of Frank and Red by Matt Coyne, Swimming for Beginners by Nicola Gill and Goodnight Mister Tom by Michelle Magorian.

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This is a heartwarming story with lots of unexpected turns and past secrets. I always like reading about senior characters like Theo Gruene in this novel and it was really interesting to see his character development as the story unfolds. I loved the other characters, too. Penelope Pie is an exceptional child although she can be a handful, and Ivy and Nita are both really loveable.
I was happy to see how they find a future together.

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Wow! First book I’ve read by this author and it won’t be the last. What a beautiful story with incredibly well written characters. Love it!

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I challenge anyone to read this book and not fall in love with Penelope Pie. This is a character that you are instantly invested in and stays with you after you finish the story. The writing is exquisite and the story flows along so nicely that you never want it to end. Setting this story against the backdrop of the COVID pandemic allowed me to revisit this unprecedented time and be reminded of the impact on daily life. I was totally unprepared for the ending and really had not even considered the possibility of how these characters might be connected. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and appreciate the ARC provided by the publisher through NetGalley.

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This is an unusual book, with themes we encounter less than we should. The characters are very much that: characters, each in their own unique way. They are deep, complex, interesting, but totally convincing. I wasn't sure whether I'd become engaged at the start. It seemed improbable and unlike many books I couldn't envisage where it might go. Often the trajectory and outcome are entirely predictable, and sometimes there's a level of pleasure in that, if the book is well written. But with The Third Act of Theo Gruene, each revelation came as a surprise, but once seen made perfect sense. The satisfaction came in the weaving together of the past and the present, the coming together of all the characters and the growth, healing and love that lay here. Once I became engaged and wanted to know more, particularly in the relationship between Theo and Penelope, it was compelling. That it was placed in the pandemic years was also valuable. I believe many of us would benefit from revisiting and processing it. I'm delighted I came upon this book and hope to read more from this author in the future.

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I was so looking forward to this book. I loved Bernice Runs Away by this author. Although I really liked this story so much, the political views thrown in by the author (as a character's views, but I think the author's) really upset me to the point that is what I will remember about the story. That is a shame.

I read to escape life. I do not pick up a book to read which I think is political or will have it interwoven in the story. It does not matter if I agree or not with the view, I just do not want it in a book that is not political in nature. I am thinking as I write this, perhaps that is why I like to read UK authors so much. They rarely have an opinion of US politics in their books.

I love books with older characters, especially if they interact with a younger person. The plot of this book is not unique in the use of an older, wiser, grumpy person as the main character. I do think it has a special twist to it that I have not read in a book prior to this. The young character is a whoot and she was a joy to get to know.

Overall a wonderfully written book. A reader not as sensitive to political views will thoroughly enjoy this story.

Thank you to One Mississippi Press LLC and NetGalley for allowing me to read the advance reader copy, with no obligation to write a review. My review is written freely as a hobby, and is totally my own opinion, not influenced by receiving the ARC.

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Inspiring story of finding friendship in difficult times😷

This novel was lovely, a true pleasure to read and become acquainted with a lonely, widowed senior citizen; an energetic, precocious young girl; and a beleaguered and desperate mother. All are caught up in the pandemic as it hits Fayatteville, Arkansas and forces them to reach out and form bonds of support and friendship to weather those scary times.

The author does a stellar job of capturing the atmosphere of the lockdown, with school closures, takeout only dining, overworked hospitals, and creating such endearing characters, particularly young Penelope who remains eternally curious, open and hopeful despite her history of hand to mouth living conditions. The story of her ubiquitous green raincoat really moved me. She's fiercely loyal to her hard-working mother and finds a way to break into Theo's solitary existence, making him a more caring individual and more involved with his neighbors and community.

Can't recommend it enough.

Thanks to One Mississippi Press LLC and NetGalley for sharing a complimentary advance copy of the book; this is my voluntary and honest opinion.

Review shared on 5/13/25 on Goodreads and Bookbub, and with Barnes & Noble and BAM.

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“The Third Act of Theo Gruene” by Talya Tate Boerner is an utterly charming, feel-good novel that had me turning the pages one after another until I finished the book in a couple of sittings. Theo Gruene, a retired and solitary botanist is disturbed one afternoon from classifying seeds by a knock on his door. The moment precocious and brilliant eight-year-old Penelope Pie Palmer steps into his world, life would never be the same again. The COVID pandemic is just beginning, and Penelope’s mother, a struggling nurse’s aide, asks Theo to teach her daughter when classes are cancelled. Theo learns that he no longer wants to be alone and that it’s never too late to learn to love and to have a family. This book brought me to happy tears more than a few times. I just loved it.

Many thanks to Net Galley and to the publisher for an ARC of this wonderful book. My opinions are my own.

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Thank you to NetGalley and One Mississippi Press for an advanced copy of this novel.

The author’s dedication, ‘to those who look for magic in the ordinary,’ sums up what this book is about. Its characters are mostly ordinary people—though that can’t be said of Penelope Pea, who takes up the better part of plot and narrative. What’s important is that, Penelope included, they all want to live ordinary lives with stability, homes of their own, enough money to be comfortable, friends and family to rely on.

Theo Gruene is a 70 year old retired professor who still takes contracts from the university to preserve obscure plant specimens. His life is unvarying and mostly solitary, but he likes it that way. He still keenly feels the loss of his wife, who died forty just as they were finalizing adoption plans. He has no family and only one true friend. He is polite but keeps his distance from his neighbours. He is a self-described curmudgeon.

Of course, that has to change. Suddenly an extremely precocious non stop chatterbox of a child, 7 year old Penelope Pea Palmer, shows up at his front door on a rainy day. She is looking for shelter because she forgot her key and her nurse-mother Ivy is still at work. He treats her kindly but not terribly warmly. Soon her highly-stressed single mother Ivy, a hospital nurse assistant, along with an endearing stray dog that Penelope names Alice, infiltrate his home and his life. Ivy is not far behind.

Theo likes the new energy and companionship they bring but also wants to preserve his quiet existence. But more change comes as the world is rocked by Covid 19. Just as everyone is ordered to mask, isolate and shelter at home, Theo’s life expands as never before.

The ending is fairly predictable, as it usually is in these ‘found family’ stories, but there are twists along the way that keep readers guessing regardless. The author writes the characters into very real people, including the ones who are just in and out of the story. Penelope is the true care of the story, with a quip for everything and a catalogue of a memory for facts—that she never hesitates to spout. She is very funny, but I confess to finding her also annoying, as does Theo, and even her own mother, who comments at times that the child really is ‘a lot.’ Ivy’s troubles make evoke sympathy, though she steps over the line of ‘entitlement’ occasionally. It’s as though being quiet, solitary and self-sufficient are character flaws. I really did enjoy this story nonetheless. I guess it’s obvious I’m a Theo type myself.

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Thank you to NetGalley and One Mississippi Press LLC for allowing me to read an ARC of The Third Act of Theo Gruene by Talya Tate Boerner, in exchange for my honest review.

4 1/2 stars!!

A cantankerous older man and a persistent little girl. What could go wrong? What could go right?

This was a beautifully written, charming and delightful story about letting people in, and letting fear and insecurities go.

The characters are realistic and fall-in-loveable. With twists and turns, it's just like life.

I look forward to reading more by Talya Tate Boerner.

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