Showing posts with label Lucy Barton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lucy Barton. Show all posts

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Tell Me Everything

Tell Me Everything by Elizabeth Strout (2024) 326 pages

Strout's novel continues the chronicling of Lucy Barton's life in the small town of Crosby, Maine, where she and her ex-husband William had gone during the pandemic. This time, the focus is more on her good friend Bob Burgess, whom she often meets to walk and talk. Olive Kitteridge, another of Strout's characters from other novels, also appears. Olive is ninety and she's also a friend of Bob's. She doesn't know Lucy, but she decides she wants to share a story with her, since Lucy is a published author. The relationship between Lucy and Olive is a bit tentative at first, but as the novel progresses, the women continue to meet to share stories.

As much as I liked the two women's stories, I was more intrigued by Bob's life, sketched out in Strout's understated way: his life with his second wife, Margaret, a pastor; his continuing friendship with his first wife, Pam; and his involvement in a legal case where a man seems to be a person of interest in his mother's disappearance. A prominent feature is Bob's friendship with Lucy, who often seems to be the only person who really understands him.

Strout's quiet realism continues to draw me in to her novels.

Thursday, June 15, 2023

Lucy By the Sea

Lucy By the Sea by Elizabeth Strout (2022) 288 pages

I still have not read the original Lucy book, My Name is Lucy Barton, but have read Strout's other books which have offered snippets of Lucy's life. The most recent chronology of Lucy's life occurs during the pandemic. Her ex-husband William, a parasitologist/microbiologist, is driven to get Lucy and their adult daughters out of New York City as the pandemic gets underway. He has found a remote place on the shores of Maine where he has rented a house for Lucy and him to live in, while their daughters find other places to stay during the lockdown.

As with Strout's other Lucy books, Lucy's story is told in first person, in her conversational and understated way, even when she feels the pain of isolation impossible to bear at times. Other times, she feels joy at the little things that make her days better, like taking a walk near the ocean and waving to neighbors. Her relationship with William is intriguing; he seems difficult at times, but they still share quite a kinship.

Life is slow in Maine, but I still found the book to be a fast read.