StoryWeb: Storytime for Grownups

168: Elizabeth Strout: "Olive Kitteridge"


Listen Later

This week on StoryWeb: Elizabeth Strout's book Olive Kitteridge.

Has there ever been a grimmer, more taciturn main character in a book than Elizabeth Strout's Olive Kitteridge? We've all known someone like Olive, someone who looks like she's just bitten into a lemon, someone for whom a kind of self-righteous grumpiness rules the day. What's so unlikely is to have such a Gloomy Gus serve as the focal point of a book.

And it must be said: Olive Kitteridge is not a sympathetic character. As readers, we don't like her. Those around her – most notably her son – don't like her either. Her husband is long-suffering. Perhaps in years past, he saw something redeeming in Olive, but even he has to brush off and walk away from her brusqueness.

Why, then, would I recommend a book like this? While we don't like Olive, we do come to understand her – and maybe we come to understand a bit more about those unpleasant people who cross our own paths from time to time. For Strout seems to be saying: everyone has a story; there's a reason everyone ticks the way they do. As novelist Melissa Bank says of the book in her review for NPR, who says you have to like a character?

Strout's approach to this book and this character is highly innovative and very intriguing. Strictly speaking, Olive Kitteridge is a very loosely connected collection of short stories. Yes, Olive shows up in every story – but sometimes she merely walks across the stage or, perhaps, walks across one corner of the stage. In other stories, she is definitively the main character, and those stories help the reader plumb Olive's depths.

This kaleidoscope of stories reveals the many facets of a character who at first seems the very definition of the term "flat." Olive, it appears initially, has one note, which might go something like "Go to hell." But as Strout turns Olive this way and that, puts her in or near one extreme situation after another, we begin to know her. If we don't exactly sympathize with her, we do begin to care to some degree what happens to her. The ending – which I won't give away – gives us as readers a modicum of comfort, as it does Olive, too.

In addition to painting a portrait of Olive Kitteridge, Strout also brings to life the world of Crosby, a small town in Maine. When we leave Olive behind – as we do in several stories – we stay in Crosby, and we learn the many ways the community hurts, then marches on despite this hurt.

Is Olive Kitteridge more than a collection of short stories? Can it be called a composite novel in the vein of, say, Ernest Hemingway's In Our Time? To my mind, it does very much work as a composite novel. Like Hemingway, Strout doesn't keep a steady, straight-ahead focus on her main character – but the stories, taken as a whole, give us a rich portrait of Olive nevertheless.

Olive Kitteridge won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction and was made into an excellent HBO miniseries, starring Frances McDormand as Olive. To translate the book to television, the screenplay writer, Jane Anderson, put the story in roughly chronological order with Olive consistently at the center of events. Despite this imposition of linearity where there is none in the book, the miniseries is a well-done production (winning eight Emmy Awards). It's a good supplement to the book but not a substitute for it.

I highly recommend reading the book first, then watching the miniseries. To get started, you can read Chapter 1, "Pharmacy," on Elizabeth Strout's website. Then consider purchasing the book and the DVD to get the full Olive Kitteridge experience.

Visit thestoryweb.com/strout for links to all these resources. There you can also listen to Sandra Burr read an excerpt from Olive Kitteridge, watch one of the trailers for the HBO miniseries, and watch Elizabeth Strout discuss the book.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

StoryWeb: Storytime for GrownupsBy Linda Tate

  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4

4.4

16 ratings


More shows like StoryWeb: Storytime for Grownups

View all
This American Life by This American Life

This American Life

91,032 Listeners

Fresh Air by NPR

Fresh Air

38,477 Listeners

Pod Save America by Crooked Media

Pod Save America

87,585 Listeners

The Daily by The New York Times

The Daily

112,751 Listeners

Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard by Armchair Umbrella

Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard

69,798 Listeners

JJ Meets World by Host J.J. Gordon and Producer Tucker Lucas

JJ Meets World

23 Listeners

The Daily Poem by Goldberry Studios

The Daily Poem

744 Listeners

Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend by Team Coco & Earwolf

Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend

59,316 Listeners

Radio Rental by Tenderfoot TV & Audacy

Radio Rental

32,927 Listeners

Mike Birbiglia's Working It Out by Mike Birbiglia

Mike Birbiglia's Working It Out

4,598 Listeners

Choice Words with Samantha Bee by Lemonada Media

Choice Words with Samantha Bee

1,789 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

16,038 Listeners

NPR's Book of the Day by NPR

NPR's Book of the Day

653 Listeners

Good Hang with Amy Poehler by The Ringer

Good Hang with Amy Poehler

10,070 Listeners