Olive Kitteridge

Trade Paperback

English language

Published July 10, 2008 by Random House.

ISBN:
978-0-8129-7183-5
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4 stars (30 reviews)

Olive Kitteridge (2008) is a novel by American author Elizabeth Strout. The novel provides a portrait of the title character and a number of recurring characters in the coastal town of Crosby, Maine. It takes the form of 13 short stories that are interrelated but discontinuous in terms of narrative. It won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and was a finalist for the 2008 National Book Critics Circle Award. HBO produced a four-part miniseries based on the novel featuring Frances McDormand in the title role, which aired on November 2 and 3, 2014. The series won eight awards at the 2015 Primetime Emmys. A sequel to the novel, titled Olive, Again, was published on October 15, 2019 by Random House.

12 editions

Olive Kitteridge

2 stars

I started trying to read this novel in December (23) but it defeats me. Perhaps it is declining RAM in my brain, but it seems to me that pointillism was fine for Seurat but as a writing technique it requires keeping too many balls in the air. I fell off the horse when Strout invented a new tree species.

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

People tell me they find this book depressing. At best, they condemn it as too realistic as if the function of literature should be to distract us from such things. Even I found the beginning difficult because Olive seemed to not give her kind husband Henry a break, but Henry is kind effortlessly. He would certainly find this book depressing. Olive doesn't have the choice to make an effort to be more like Henry. She has as little insight into who she is as Henry until the book's end. No one in the book really does and thus they suffer when they realize that life doesn't really work out the way they've been told. When they notice, they become surprised, then angry, then depressed and think it's just them. Maybe that's what people mean by "too realistic" but this refusal to see the conventional as desirable is why I like …

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Bin sehr langsam reingekommen; überfordert von immer neuen Charakteren um die Hauptperson herum. Aber irgendwann ist der Plot dann geflossen und ich mag die Geschichten sehr, die kleinen wie die großen.

Es nervt schon die zwei, drei Male, wo sie ihre Charaktere offen rassistisch sein und dies so stehen lässt ...

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I did not think I could love a book about old white people at their end of days in small-town Maine as much as I did this one, and it helps me understand (if not forgive) why so many of them are Trump voters, notwithstanding that the titular character here considers Republicans (in the GW Bush era) to be idiots.

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

3.5 stars, and tough to rate. I think I would have preferred this if there were less stories in which Olive and her family aren't the central characters. I had a hard time motivating myself to keep reading when I knew the next story wasn't about Olive.

Olive is a difficult, conflicting, captivating character; I didn't like her at all, but I was sad for her, and occasionally happy for her, and I maybe loved her. It felt very strange and awful and wonderful to be inside her head.

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I really enjoyed the stories in this book. Sometime I don't go for a novel that is really short stories that are related (similar to Cloud Atlas). But these stories really seemed to flow together to tell the larger story. Quite bittersweet, almost sad, the human condition. I think we'll all run into an Olive Kitteridge at some point in our lives.

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book got mixed reviews, with some of us loving it and others wondering how the hell it could get a Pulitzer. The structure of the book was a bit startling - a series of short stories, all of which at least mentioned Olive Kitteridge. But this allowed you to see Olive from a number of different viewpoints. Each of the stories could stand on its own, with its main character often coming to a crisis point and making a life-changing decision. Olive, on the other hand, grew and changed at a glacial pace. But at least she did, in the end.

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

This is a series of connected short stories all involving people, places, and events in Olive Kitteridge's life. Even though Olive is on the surface a fairly unlikeable character (her temper changes on a dime and blunt doesn't come close to describing some of her behavior), one can't help wanting to jump to her defense when other characters disparage her. This was a very quick read, but beautifully written. I couldn't put it down.

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This was handed to me back in May, with a 'it is so good--you gotta read it' and the description that it was rather depressing. No surprise that I didn't actually start reading it until late September.
It is good, and I did enjoy it. It does qualify as somewhat depressing, as mortality figures into the arc of the book. It is a series of intertwined short stories, all set in the same small town. In the beginning, Olive is probably in her mid thirties. At the end, she's a widowed old woman. She's central to some of the stories, but hardly present in others. You meet men and women, old and young, at all sorts of different points in their lives. It made me think of 'Spoon River Anthology,' but it has been so many years since I read those poems, that this comparison is probably highly inaccurate.

Review of 'Olive Kitteridge' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I heard Olive Kitteridge reviewed on NPR a few weeks ago and put in my library request right away because it really sounded like my kind of book. I was not disappointed! Every story is a little jewel, beautifully written and sparse of detail but sketching a vivid picture of the life of each character, and linked together by the marvelously three-dimensional Olive. Lovely.

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