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fiction

Bobby Finger Pays Tribute to New York’s Gay Community, Then and Now

The second novel from the co-host of the “Who? Weekly” podcast follows a West Village writer in the early 1990s and today.

The cover of “Four Squares” shows the title and author’s name in white font against a full-bleed drawing of the facade of contiguous residential buildings, the left one green and the right one blue, with windows lit from within. The silhouette of a person reading appears in the top right window.

Stephen McCauley’s latest novel, “You Only Call When You’re in Trouble,” was published in January.

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FOUR SQUARES, by Bobby Finger


You know you’re old when a decade you consider the recent past is the historical setting of a new novel. That’s the reality check I received while reading “Four Squares,” the heartfelt and entertaining second novel by Bobby Finger, the co-host of the celebrity news podcast “Who? Weekly.”

It’s 1992, and Artie Anderson is in his West Village apartment, baking a cake for his 30th birthday. Artie moved to New York six years earlier to become a writer, and find sex and love somewhere more open to queerness than his “tense and silent home” in Ohio. What he found was a gay community shattered by AIDS and his creative ambitions derailed by work at an ad agency. Shy and fearful of contracting H.I.V., he has been “worrying himself out of 90 percent of his desires and regretting it 100 percent of the time.”

His triumph has been finding a new, chosen family in his best friends, Kim, Waylon and Adam. The four gossip, attend political protests and make regular trips to Julius’, the Greenwich Village gay bar now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

It’s there that the newly 30 Artie meets Abe, a handsome, closeted bisexual man who will encourage Artie’s artistic aspirations and, ultimately, break his heart.

We next see Artie in 2022, on his 60th birthday, living a different life than the one he was cultivating 30 years earlier as a financially comfortable ghostwriter for celebrity memoirs.

Most unexpectedly, he lives alone, has few friends and has sex “about as frequently as a flu shot.” Shellshocked after losing so many loved ones, to AIDS, auto accidents and unexpected health crises, he centers his social life around Abe’s ex-wife, Vanessa, and their adult daughter, Halle. “You’d think that when they snipped the umbilical cord off me, they just attached it right to you,” Vanessa says of Artie’s attachment to Halle. Over birthday cake, Artie discovers that the two women are moving to Seattle, an abandonment that shakes him into action.


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