Joseph Banks is having a terrible year. He is sixty-one years old, has a bad heart, and because of that, suffers from erectile dysfunction. His wife of forty-two years had lost her patience and sought relief with a young man just above the legal age to drink. She does not view her affair as cheating, and refuses to stop once Joseph discovers her secret. She brings the entire family in for an intervention. Not one adult in the family supports Joseph’s objection, or his demand that his wife cease her infidelity, particularly in his home. The only family supporting Joseph are his three teenaged granddaughters. Civil war breaks out in the family once his wife begins insisting Joseph meet and befriend her young lover, who she wants the entire family to embrace. Loyalty is loyalty, and betrayal is betrayal. There is no uglier, or more vicious war, than a civil war.