Curtainup Founder & Editor Elyse Sommer's Epilogue -- I've passed the torch for reviewing and editing new theater productions on and off-Broadway and elsewhere. However, I'll continue to sound off here with my take on Live and Onscreen Entertainment. As for Curtainup's extensive content since 1996-- it's all sill available at www.curtainup.com

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

With Tell Me Everything, Elizabeth Strout Revisits the Remarkable Literary World She Created in Her Previous Nine Novels

With Tell Me Everything, Elizabeth Strout Revisits the Remarkable Literary World She Created in Her Previous Nine Novels

By Elyse Sommer

To start with a hurrah: This latest in Strout's fictional Maine coastal town stories has all the elements  that made the novels so emotionally powerful and interesting to read, despite not being all that plot  driven. The vivid, stylistically smart writing is more than likely to prompt first-time Strout readers to   explore her whole oeuvre. And fans like me will want to re-read at least a few, like the Pulitzer Prize  winning Olive Kitteridge and Lucy by the Sea.

 As in the past, Tell Me Evertything has the feel of a series but isn't. The book has the two most  Stroudian characters -- Lucy Barton and Olive Kitteridge -- who meet, become friends, and reflect on the meaning of life. The new entry in the Crosby/Shirley Falls saga again plays out within the reality of what's happening in the world. In the case of Tell Me Everything, that's the comeback from the  pandemic, which sent Lucy and her ex-husband William to Crosby and safety in Lucy by the Sea

It's a worrisome world to reflect and act upon for the now 90-year-old Olive, along with Lucy, William and Bob Burgess and his minister wife, Margaret. They, as well as other locals, will be as familiar as old friends to Strout fans.  

Fortunately, Strout is at the top of her game. The themes explored are complex and connected with  masterful finesse. But ultimately it's the gorgeous and wonderfully visual writing and identifiability of   her characters that earns Strout's work its masterwork credentials. Happily, there are still enough  readers who value serious writing to make all of her books best sellers. Like other bestselling novels, several have  been adapted for on-screen viewing: Olive Kitteridge, as a very watchable mini-series starring Frances McDormand and My Name Is Lucy Barton as a solo showcase for Laura Linney on Broadway. (My  review of that play is still in Curtainup's archives.)

Actually, Strout's own reference to the episodes in her novels as "scenes" backs up my feeling that  more of her books could be staged as solos, or with two or four of her key characters, using some great  projections of the so vividly described background. However, although I'm as much a theater as reading enthusiast, for me the charm and power of Strout's work is on the page. 

That said, despite her downplaying of plots, she does manage to include an intriguing subplot in every  book. Tell Me Everything is no exception. It includes a local murder case that introduces a terrific new  character who re-activates the about-to-close law practice of Bob Burgess.

A final word about Strout's place among fiction's greats. Unlike Tolstoy and Balzac, she lets her stories  and characters blossom on her own native soil, as Wllla Cather did long ago with My Antonia. And so Tell Me Everything does everything these great novels do:  It's interesting, emotionally engaging and re-readable at different times of the reader's life. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


No comments:

Post a Comment