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Olive, Again: From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Olive Kitteridge

Olive, Again: From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Olive Kitteridge

byElizabeth Strout
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Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 starsQuiet masterpiece
Reviewed in Australia on 22 November 2019
It’s true what they say - Elizabeth Strout is a masterly writer. Here, in a series of vignettes about various people in the town of Crosby, Maine, that almost reads like a series of short stories, we discover the ins and outs of Olive’s later life, because they all know Olive. Of course some of the vignettes are directly about Olive herself. It sometimes feels inconsequential, but in hearing about the mundane details of ordinary lives a picture is built of a whole culture and its idiosyncratic denizens. Olive is as straightforward as ever , her bluntness making us smile, but although she’s insightful (usually), about others, she’s been less insightful about herself and her somewhat strained relationships with, for example, her son. At the end, when she’s well into her eighties and typing up some memories, she thinks: “I do not have a clue who I have been. Truthfully, I do not understand a thing”. Nevertheless, she’s impacted many lives significantly and this book is a marvellous meditation on aging and the growing of wisdom. Which sounds simple but isn’t. There’s many a fine nuance to be traversed.
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Aitchempee
1.0 out of 5 starsDreary and depressing
Reviewed in Australia on 4 January 2020
Loved #1Olive, and ES is an amazing writer but honestly, this book is the most depressing book I have ever read ... a load of incessant hyphens and boring narrative of she said and then he said and she said and then she said ... it was so monotonous in its sameness no matter whose story was being told, and each story increasingly so dreadfully depressing. Goodness, what an exciting life we all have to look forward to in old age.... if that is the point of it all. And the only take-away from it ; there is no point to it all. How sad.
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Snapdragon
TOP 50 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars Quiet masterpiece
Reviewed in Australia on 22 November 2019
Verified Purchase
It’s true what they say - Elizabeth Strout is a masterly writer. Here, in a series of vignettes about various people in the town of Crosby, Maine, that almost reads like a series of short stories, we discover the ins and outs of Olive’s later life, because they all know Olive. Of course some of the vignettes are directly about Olive herself. It sometimes feels inconsequential, but in hearing about the mundane details of ordinary lives a picture is built of a whole culture and its idiosyncratic denizens. Olive is as straightforward as ever , her bluntness making us smile, but although she’s insightful (usually), about others, she’s been less insightful about herself and her somewhat strained relationships with, for example, her son. At the end, when she’s well into her eighties and typing up some memories, she thinks: “I do not have a clue who I have been. Truthfully, I do not understand a thing”. Nevertheless, she’s impacted many lives significantly and this book is a marvellous meditation on aging and the growing of wisdom. Which sounds simple but isn’t. There’s many a fine nuance to be traversed.
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ECamaldulensis
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding
Reviewed in Australia on 2 May 2021
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The way the stories in this are told - Olive’s is intertwined with the others from the town - is just wonderful and the style is spare, almost like Raymond Carver. The reflections on ageing and mortality are so poignant, probably the best I’ve read.
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Anne Pender
5.0 out of 5 stars When age is an advantage
Reviewed in Australia on 4 February 2020
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Olive is such a human character and so totally lacking in any 'side'. Trying to describe this book is to have to find a way of making unattractive seeming characters pleasant - and that's tough. I do wonder if having some of the failings so openly described makes it easier to appreciate them. They come and go through Olive's life and she comments and interacts with them in her terribly down to earth, 'no frills' manner. there's no particular story to recount, no action to describe - just life to be lived.
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Stephen Clark
5.0 out of 5 stars A whole life
Reviewed in Australia on 4 December 2019
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To have followed Olive in two books is a privilege. Cranky as she is, she is good company. I understood the way she wavers in her affections, buffeted by constantly shifting emotions and memories. An excellent thoughtful book about the surprises in life, they never stop coming.
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Susan Browne
5.0 out of 5 stars Goodbye, Olive
Reviewed in Australia on 25 March 2020
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I feel like I've lost a friend. How can a writer inhabit the life of one woman so effectively? Such writing is genius. Every bit as brilliant as Olive Ketteridge if not better with its melancholy march toward the end of life.
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Libby Bowen
5.0 out of 5 stars Olive is wonderful
Reviewed in Australia on 19 April 2020
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This second novel is just as good if not better than the first. Olive goes through life with her unique take on things and teaches us much of the human condition
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Gloria sharp
5.0 out of 5 stars Always wonderful
Reviewed in Australia on 17 April 2020
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Elizabeth Strout once again amazes with her deceptively simple insight. Allowing us to share a olive (again) is truly a gift. Thank you!
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Fiona Collier
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great read from this author
Reviewed in Australia on 7 February 2021
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As a follow on from the original Olive Ketteridge book it is brilliant
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Ms Belinda J Keatinge
5.0 out of 5 stars I will miss Olive
Reviewed in Australia on 11 January 2020
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Love this book as much as the first! Sad that this is the end of wonderful honest Olive. X x
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carolyn woolley
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book
Reviewed in Australia on 4 June 2020
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I loved this book. Dear Olive is such an interesting character.
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