Who is Olive Kitteridge anyway?
Patricia Anders submits-
Hi Joey.
Iâm a new Gloucester resident whoâs been enjoying Good Morning Gloucester for the past couple of months. What a great way to get acquainted with my new town! My husband and I are from the Greater Los Angeles area, and we just love the true sense of community in Gloucester (in LA, forget about anyone ever stopping in traffic to let you turn left in front of them!).
Itâs also been fun to see all the pictures and recreations of downtown for the upcoming HBO film Olive Kitteridge. I was thinking that most Gloucester residents are probably wondering just who is this âOlive Kitteridge,â so I thought maybe they might enjoy reading a book review I wrote about it a few years ago (yes, it was a bookâeven won a Pulitzer Prize!). Attached is the review that was published in Modern Reformation magazine, of which I am the managing editor (although Iâm now also working as an associate editor at Hendrickson over the bridge in Peabody).
Keep up the good work!
All the best,
Patricia
This review column is subti- tled, âBooks Your Neighbors Are Reading,â but Iâm thinking it might need to be calledâat least in this caseââBooks Your Neighbors Should Be Reading.â I doubt most people race to their newspaper on the day the Pulitzer Prizes are announced (and that goes for the Nobel Prizes as wellâ
who do you know has read anything by the 2009 literature winner Herta MĂźller?). These are highly esteemed awards and for writers can mean a nice increase in sales (as these are books rarely found beforehand on The New York Times Best Sellers List). Iâm wondering, however, how many of your neighbors logged online or ran down to their local bookseller to grab one of these prize winners?
So, the question remains, how many of your neighbors have even heard of last yearâs Nobel winner Herta MĂźller or the Pulitzer winner Elizabeth Strout, let alone have read their prize-winning books? But arenât we curious to know why these writers have won? Surely, they have accom- plished something worthy of our attention.
Having said all that, let me recommend that you obtain the 2009 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Olive Kitteridge; read it yourself and then pass it along to your neighbors! This Pulitzer Prize is awarded for âdistinguished fiction by an American author, preferably dealing with American life.â According to the Pulitzer announcement, the prize was awarded to âOlive Kitteridge, by Elizabeth Strout (Random House), a collection of 13 short stories set in small-town Maine that packs a cumulative emotional wallop, bound together by polished prose and by Olive, the title character, blunt, flawed and fascinating.â But what makes Olive so fas- cinating, and why do we want to read a story about a woman âbluntâ and âflawedâ?
When we meet her, Olive Kitteridge is a cranky retired high school math teacher and her husband Henry, a kindly retired pharmacist. They seem to have a ânormalâ life, but this is the beauty and the power of this story: no oneâs life is ordinary, especially Oliveâs. What makes this book so compelling is the way Olive impacts the lives around her, whether itâs an in-class comment one of her former students remembersââDonât be scared of your hunger. If youâre
scared of your hunger, youâll just be one more ninny like everyone elseâ (195)âor an encounter with Nina, a young woman suffering severely from anorexia nervosa.
Ninaâs story, located in the chapter âStarving,â is one of the most touching in the novel. Olive Kitteridge appears only in a brief scene, but it is a memorable one. Olive, normally a strong and rather offensive woman, shows a deep sym- pathy for Nina. Having stopped by a friendâs to collect money for the Red Cross, and breaking in upon what she calls âa tea partyâ in her usual sarcastic manner, Olive notices the thin- ness of Nina and says to her, âYouâre starving.â The girl, quite aware of her condition, responds with an ungracious âUh- duh.â To which Olive responds, âIâm starving, too.â Nina doesnât believe her, but Olive persists: âSure I am. We all are.â A few moments later, we are told through the eyes of a middle-aged man who also is âstarvingâ:
Olive looked through her big black handbag, took a tis- sue, wiped at her mouth, her forehead. It took a moment for Harmon to realize she was agitated….Olive Kitteridge was crying. If there was anyone in town Harmon believed he would never see cry, Olive was that person. But there she sat, large and big-wristed, her mouth quivering, tears coming from her eyes. (96)
Olive says to Nina, âI donât know who you are, but young lady, youâre breaking my heart.â Itâs not long before Nina is crying with her, leaning against her and whispering, âI donât want to be like this.â
This scene comes rather as a shock to the reader who is used to Oliveâs off-handed insolenceâthere doesnât seem to be a sensitive bone in her big body. She is of solid, hearty Maine stock, a schoolteacher for thirty-two years who thinks she has seen everything. Yet she is moved to tears by a young woman who compels her to disclose that she too is hungryâand perhaps even scared (although she will never confess that she may have become the much-maligned âninnyâ). The rest of the story works out the reason for this hunger, and we come to realize that it is really all Oliveâs doing. She is stubborn and canât seem to show love to her husband and her sonâat least in the way they need to be lovedâand certainly can never admit when sheâs wrong. Only too late in life does she finally realize this.
Although she doesnât seem to support or encourage her husband or son, she somehow gives strength to othersâ even if itâs merely sitting in the car with a former student whom she doesnât realize has returned to his hometown to commit suicide, just as his mother had done years earlier. Strout does not resolve his story for us, and we are left won- dering whether or not Kevin went through with itâbut I like to think he didnât. After he saves the life of an old friend (while picking flowers, she happens to slip down the cliff into the ocean while Kevin and Olive are sitting in the car), he says of Patty Howe who clung to him after he jumped into the water: âOh, insane, ludicrous, unknowable world! Look how she wanted to live, look how she wanted to hold onâ (47).
In the chapter simply named âTulipsâ (Olive is an avid gardener), after her husband Henry has suffered a debili- tating stroke and her son Christopher has moved to California with his new wife (whom Olive does not like), Olive finally begins to understand:
There were daysâshe could remember thisâwhen Henry would hold her hand as they walked home, middle-aged people, in their prime. Had they known at these moments to be quietly joyful? Most likely not. People mostly did not know enough when they were living life that they were living it. But she had that memory now, of something healthy and pure. (162)
Once again, Strout saysânow through Olive, echoing Kevinâs words aboveâthat this is a âstrange and incompre- hensible world.â Olive had given permission to Henry to die, and now she pondered whether or not to plant her tulip bulbs âbefore the ground was frozenâ (162).
After some time has elapsed, in the chapter âSecurity,â Olive travels to visit her newly remarried son (weâre never quite sure if she likes the second wife), who now resides in New York City. As she flies over Maine,
Olive saw spread out below them fields of bright and tender green in this morning sun, farther out the coastline, the ocean shiny and almost flat, tiny white wakes behind a few lobster boatsâthen Olive felt something she had not expected to feel again: a sud- den surging greediness for life. She leaned forward, peering out the window: sweet pale clouds, the sky as blue as your hat, the new green of the fields, the broad expanse of waterâseen from up here it all appeared wondrous, amazing. She remembered what hope was, and this was it. That inner churning that moves you forward, plows you through life the way the boats below plowed the shiny water, the way the plane was plowing forward to a place new, and where she was needed. She had been asked to be part of her sonâs life. (202â3)
Although Olive appears to be a strong woman, we dis- cover that she is frailâemotionally and spiritually. Only at the age of seventy-two, when she begins to lose those she loved, does she realize what she had. âSometimes, like now, Olive had a sense of just how desperately hard every person in the world was working to get what they needed. For most, it was a sense of safety, in the sea of terror that life increasingly became. People thought love would do it, and maybe it didâ (211).
In the end, Olive reaches out for companionship but pic- tures it as âtwo slices of Swiss cheese pressed together, such holes they brought to this unionâwhat pieces life took out of youâ (270). Although there have been chapters of vari- ous characters and their thoughts (with Olive only popping momentarily into a scene), Strout gives Olive the last word: âHer eyes were closed, and throughout her tired self swept
waves of gratitudeâand regret. She pictured the sunny room, the sun-washed wall, the bayberry outside. It baffled her, the world. She did not want to leave it yetâ (270).
An interesting âinterviewâ follows the end of the story with the author, the Random House Readerâs Circle, and Olive Kitteridge. Olive is her usual cantankerous self and when Strout asks Olive why there seems to be so many sui- cidal thoughts or even attempts in such a small town, Olive characteristically answers: âYou may be the writer, Elizabeth, but I think itâs a wacky question, and Iâll tell you something elseâitâs none of your damn business. Good-bye people. I have a garden to weed.â
It is my sincere hope that youâand your neighborsâ
will eagerly look for the announcement this spring of the
2010 Pulitzer Prize fiction winner. If the next one is anything like Olive Kitteridge, weâre in for a treatâor as Olive would say, âThatâs ducky.â
Patricia Anders is managing editor of Modern Reformation.
âThis thought causes Olive to nod her head slowly as she lies on the bed. She knows that loneliness can kill peopleâin different ways can actually make you die. Oliveâs private view is that life depends on what she thinks of as âbig burstsâ and âlittle bursts.â Big bursts are things like marriage or children, intimacies that keep you afloat, but these big bursts hold dangerous, un- seen currents. Which is why you need the little bursts as well: a friendly clerk at Bradleeâs, letâs say, or the waitress at Dunkinâ Donuts who knows how you like your coffee. Tricky business, really.â
Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout





















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