Elizabeth Stout is an American literary novelist whose novels are a continuous tale of characters whose lives overlap in her prolific collection of books set in the fictional small town of Shirley Falls, ME with Lucy Barton, a successful novelist at their fulcrum. Stout is a critically acclaimed, best selling author. Her previous novel "Olive Kitteridge" (K) won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. In K, Stout strung together a series of loosely entwined short stories that meshed together into a richly, descriptive novel of a town and its sundry inhabitants. The motifs running through "Tell Me Everything" are Stout's common memes of loneliness or need for being seen, love in all its various forms constitutes love, and the meaning of life remains an eternal enigma. The overriding message is that everyone's life is a story worthy of being told. These recurring themes may seem trite or banal, but in Stout's skillful hands, crafts a beguiling tale of grace and intrigue. All Stout's characters and the town itself come alive with her sharp descriptions and use of humor, emotions and behaviors. The people are all fallible, remarkable and likable. Lucy Barton, now middle-aged with two grown daughters, granddaughter and ex-husband (with whom she resides) has defied the constraints of a bleak and abysmal childhood and still managed to achieve success as a writer. She distanced herself from the shackles of Shirley Falls and chose to return home. Lucy reconnects with her old steadfast friend, Bob Burgess. Burgess is an attorney, married to the town's parishioner, Margaret. Margaret likes the sound of her own sermons a tad too much. William, Lucy's ex, drones on too much about his boring field; parasites. And, old Olive Kitteridge, feisty as ever at 95, is still a sounding board for others' stories; especially Lucy's. There's assorted loco, locals who imbibe too much, have illicit affairs with friends' spouses and those putting noses inside others' houses. Plus, there's more with a murder mystery to solve. The prime suspect is an oddball loner who becomes Burgess' client. Lucy and Bob take regular strolls together in all kinds of weather while friends and lovers fall from favor. Out of all Stout's exceptional novels, TELL ME EVERYTHING contains everyone from her past literary works. In this ambitious and gratifying read, everything eventually tugs at the heartstrings. Stout satisfies loose ends in her character's lives. so it seems. Still, life is full of surprises. Surely, Stout will provide us with more from the lives of Lucy and her Shirley Falls' family. Hopefully! Stout leaves us with Lucy saying to Olive, "Love comes in so many different forms, but it is always love. If it is love, then it is love."
Thursday, February 13, 2025
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
WIN ME SOMETHING-Something Special in this Millennial Coming of Age Novel in NYC
Lusica Wu's debut novel, WIN ME SOMETHING (WMS) is a captivating tale about a 24 year old college graduate, Willa Chen, who finds herself at odds and lands a nanny job for a wealthy couple living in NYS's trendy Tribeca neighborhood. Willa is the only child from the marriage of a Caucasian mother and Asian father which leaves her floundering to find roots. She's distanced from both parents who've moved on to second marriages and more children. The name Willa translates to strong-willed warrior or desire. Our young heroine, while not strong willed, is resolute in her pursuit to forge connections having grown up feeling very much alone. As she puts it, "in my solitary world...I don't know what it's like to be in a family." Willa wins the reader over by not being pitiful despite being lonely. We admire her unflappability and willingness to open herself up to form attachments. After graduating, Willa worked nights as a bartender and wanted to try something during daytime hours. She finds working for a rich couple caring for their precocious 9-year old daughter, Bijou, as a live-in nanny. The relationship between Willa and Bijou moves the story along with zest and warmth. Bijou's packed schedule is filled with enrichment classes of ballet, violin, mandarin etc. Bijou is also a budding chef whose culinary skills are encouraged at home. WMS does give a fun peek inside the extravagant lifestyle of NYC's rich and parodies some of their snobbish behaviors. However, the main focus is Willa's quest for any port in a storm. As much as she'd like to be accepted as a member of Bijou's family she will also always remain an outsider to them and to others remain at a distance being bi-racial and of two disjointed families. Wu's debut novel traverses Willa's childhood and back to the present through Willa's keen understanding of herself being on the sidelines. In truth, neither her parents or Bijou's parents are cruel or heartless, but neither provides the nurturing Willa craves.Throughout, Willa retains a pragmatic understanding of herself and a sense of humor which lends enjoyment to this clever and delightful read. Besides being geared for millennials, there are universal themes of feeling listless and unanchored in Wu's winning debut novel. Willa's father confides that her younger sisters are too coddled and tells her,"You were never like that, picky, or afraid. I know you can handle life. You're tough." We agree with that assessment which we've perceived all along. Willa maintains our affection with her desire and to fit in and our admiration for her self-realization. At a party of wealthy, young urbanites Willa observed the other sophisticated women and admits, "I watched all this and I tried to do it, but it never worked for me. Everyone knew I was pretending to be someone else...But I didn't feel the way I used to-that I'd give anything to become one of them. They'd see through me, and that was worse. I would have to be myself."
Saturday, February 8, 2025
WEST with GIRAFFES-Historic Fiction-Old Fashioned Story Telling that Feels Stifling
Lynda Rutledge's novel is part coming of age story set during the era of the Great Dust Bowl based on the true story of the first giraffes to be transported from Africa across the Atlantic and then transported to San Diego across country. Rutledge's research mirrors very closely the epic journey cross the US continent to the San Diego Zoo. There's many moving parts to this tall tale written in the style of a dated black/white movie depicting the fallouts from both the Great Dust Bowl and Great Depression. Furthermore, there is the interesting historical figure, Belle Benchley, the first female zoo director in the world who oversaw the entire operation for 26 years becoming known for advocating for the protection of wildlife. Despite the extraordinary elements from an epoch in our nation's history, the novel's archaic storytelling is so arid and musty it's not worth the time spent reading. Woodrow Wilson, "Woody" is the novel's protagonist whose parents and younger sister both perish on their dried up farm in TX leaving him orphaned and nearly penniless. He takes to the rails like many other hobos scrounging to find work, food and shelter. Woody went from the Great Dust Bowl into the Great New England Hurricane of 1938 which impacted the ship carrying the pair of giraffes purchased for the zoo. So many great disasters to fabricate a fascinating story and Rutledge panders her material with Woody's cheesy infatuation with a red headed older woman and his abject alliance to the "old man" who unwillingly resigns to hiring him to help drive the truck transporting the two giraffes. The saga which takes them through the segregated south, and through the ravaged countryside. Unfortunately, Rutledge reduces the novel to a rudimentary yarn with stock stereotypes of your grumpy old man with a soft heart and a wild redheaded ingenue with a sickly heart who wants to have one last adventure. Woody's woes are alluded to and the revealed admission to the old man is a mawkish payoff of regret for a tragedy not of his making. What I did find refreshing were the interactions between the giraffes and their givers. The exotic creatures were endearing and their welfare was the heart of the novel that never embraced the essence of what Belle Benchley or someone like Jane Goodall have dedicated their lives to. The novel is structured around Woody urgently writing his memoir to be a lasting vestige of his great love for the giraffes and his unrequited love from Red. I didn't care for what I read. Instead, this reads like an old fashioned B western movie with stereotypical tropes of Hillbilly Hicks and a lovesick lad. Even with all the great historic makings, it was just bad.
Monday, January 6, 2025
Jill Clement's Revisits Initiation and Duration of Her Marriage with 30 Year Age Difference
S Harvey's ORBITAL Extraordinary Exploration of Space Travel and Humanity
Samantha Harvey's Booker Prize (2024) winning novel ORBITAL is an exceptional literary achievement that elevates the reader into outer space. It contemplates life's achievements, big and small. Harvey's eloquence raises questions of what gives life meaning while placing the reader inside an international space capsule. The power of Harvey's writing shares the experiences of feeling weightless in space packed in with six fictitious astronauts whose thoughts traverse thousands of feet above earth back down to their connections with earth and ties to each other. This beautiful novel feels expansive and condensed. It's both limitless in its grace while floating through the capsule or walking outside in space. There's also a sense of confinement within their spacesuits and space shuttle. The narrative pulls at your senses as well, and it imbues a visceral sense of weigthlessness. The quietness of its revelations from each of the astronauts is profound in their breathtaking observations looking back at earth and stirring in their mundane yearnings. "They speak about things they miss-fresh doughnuts, fresh cream, roast potatoes. The sweets of their childhood." The brilliance of the writing juxtaposes opposing conceits. "Those hearts, so inflated with ecstasy; at the spectacle of space, are at the same time withered by it." One astronaut questions his own motive for space exploration. "He's never sure if man's lust for space is curiosity. or ingratitude. If this weird hot longing makes him a hero or an idiot, Undoubtedly something just short of either." Our home planet is the crux of diametrical conceptions. "The earth is once again a glass marble in the blackest space. Bereft and fragile now that its neighboring stars and planets can no longer be seen. And yet it is, at the same time, the opposite of fragile. There's nothing there on its flawless surface that could break, and it's as if there is in fact nothing there at all-the more you look at it the less substance it has and the more it becomes an apparition, a Holy Ghost." Without rancor or proselytizing, the insanity of a divisive, embattled earth is scorned. Borders and warring factions are deemed irrelevant if not foolish and self-destructive. "What use are diplomatic games on a spacecraft. We are one. For now at least, we are one. Everything we have up here is only what we reuse and share. We can't be divided, this is the truth. We won't be because we can't be. We drink each other's recycled urine. We breathe each other's recycled air." The warning message contained within ORBITAL is forceful in its simplicity. "The planet is shaped by the sheer amazing force of human want, which has changed everything, the forests, the poles, the reservoirs, the glaciers, the rivers, the seas, the mountains, the coastlines, the skies, a planet contoured and landscaped by want." Harvey captivates the reader within her orbit. This is a must read, stellar novel.