Baker Vaughan
Posted by Literary Titan

Baker Vaughan is a contemporary family saga that follows a man in his fifties who leaves a polished but hollow life in New York, heads to Idaho, and tries to reclaim a calling to the priesthood that he abandoned decades earlier. From there, the novel opens outward into his past and present at once: family history in Virginia, old love, public shame, church politics, private guilt, and the stubborn hope that a person can still change late in life. What stayed with me most is that this is not a story about reinvention in the glossy sense. It is about excavation. Baker is not building a brand-new self. He is digging through the rubble of the one he kept dodging for years.
What I liked most about Hotchkiss’s writing is that it trusts conversation, memory, and moral mess more than plot tricks. The book has a big emotional reach, but it usually moves in a human scale, one uneasy conversation, one humiliating mistake, one remembered kindness at a time. I found that effective. Baker can be self-aware and self-deceiving in the same breath, which made him feel real to me. The prose often lingers on place, class, church ritual, and family texture, and that gives the novel a lived-in quality. I could always feel the author’s investment in these people, and that sincerity carried me through.
This book does not treat religion as wallpaper or as an easy source of wisdom. It treats faith as something tangled up with vanity, longing, performance, grace, and the need to be forgiven without always knowing how to earn it. That made the novel feel sharper to me than a simple redemption story. I also liked the way the family saga side of the book deepens the present-day drama. Baker’s mother’s alcoholism, the pressure of class and expectation, his early sense of calling, and the old relationships that still shape him all give the story weight. You can feel how the younger Baker never really disappears. He just ages into a more complicated man.
Baker Vaughan will resonate with readers who enjoy character-driven fiction, church and family dramas, and novels that care more about conscience than speed. I would recommend it to people who like literary fiction with a strong emotional backbone, especially readers drawn to stories about second chances, spiritual restlessness, and the long shadow of earlier choices. It’s reflective, sometimes raw, and patient in the way it lets a life unfold. The people most likely to appreciate it are readers willing to sit with an imperfect man and watch him try, fail, remember, and keep reaching anyway.
Pages: 309 | ASIN : B0GX2S4V7V
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on April 28, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged author, Baker Vaughan, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporarty fiction, dating, death, ebook, family saga, goodreads, Grief & Bereavement Fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Relationships & Spirituality, story, Stuart Hotchkiss, writer, writing. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





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