Thursday, December 21, 2017

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout


First Line: For many years Henry Kitteridge was a pharmacist in the next town over, driving every morning on snowy roads, or rainy roads, or summertime roads, when the wild raspberries shot their new growth in brambles along the last section of town before he turned off to where the wider road led to the pharmacy.

In a series of thirteen vignettes, author Elizabeth Strout sets out to illuminate a small town in coastal Maine and one of its inhabitants, a retired schoolteacher named Olive Kitteridge.

Readers are the voyeurs in Olive Kitteridge. While we peep into the lives of a piano player in a lounge, a troubled teenage girl, and Olive's own husband and son (among others), we see people dealing with all sorts of problems... and we see that Olive is-- for the most part-- considered to be a rather unpleasant and unpredictable force of nature. But as our knowledge of the people of Crosby, Maine increases so does Olive's self-awareness. The lessons she learns are sometimes painful and always ruthlessly honest.

I loved how my understanding of the characters deepened with each new chapter. Initially seen in an unflattering light, some characters changed as the light shone upon them from different angles.

This is a little gem, although I can see some readers believing that nothing ever happens in it. I found this book to be mesmerizing and to contain one brilliant character study after another. Quiet, unassuming writing can sometimes wield great power and beauty, and this is exactly what I found in the pages of Olive Kitteridge.


Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout
eISBN: 9781588366887
Random House © 2008
eBook, 271 pages

Fiction, Standalone
Rating: A+
Source: Purchased from Amazon.


6 comments:

  1. This sounds like an interesting way to lift the curtain on a place and a way of life, Cathy. And I always appreciate solid character development. And not every book has to be a 'thrill a minute' type of read...

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    1. No. Those thrills-a-minute books tend to wear me out. ;-)

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  2. I started this book but didn't finish it. I may pick it back up sometime. Glad you enjoyed it.

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    1. I think it's a book readers either love or hate. If you couldn't get into it the first time, perhaps that was a warning?

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  3. I haven't read the book, but saw most of part one of the TV series. Frances McDormand is terrific playing Olive Kitteridge, but the story is so depressing, the loneliness, isolation, unsatisfying relationships, people trapped in despair with no way out.

    I couldn't finish watching it. The unrelenting despair got to me.

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    1. I might want to see this just because your comment about the TV series isn't the first one that mentions being depressing-- and I didn't get that feeling from the book at all. Of course, my personal battles with depression may make me see it differently from others.

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