Community Stuff 11/15/13

Holiday Fair 2013 (2)


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On November 23rd. St. John’s Gloucester at 48 Middle Street will hold its Country Cupboard Fair from 9:00am-2;00pm in conjunction with the Middle Street Harvest Festival.  Many of the parishioners will be in Victorian dress to celebrate the 150th Anniversary of the church and the Gettysburg Address.
There will be hand made crafts, bake goods, jewelry, a cookie walk, artisan cheese, seasonal decorations, a silent auction as well as their traditional fish chowder luncheon. Also the popular Thrift Shop will be open and there will be a 50/50 raffle where 50% goes for outreach programs and the other half to the winner.
This should offer a good time for all as the holiday season begins, and getting ready for the holidays takes a priority.


Hi Joey,

I’m attaching some pics and a poem with info about the upcoming Holy Family Christmas Fair on the November 23.  The ladies in the pic, from right to left, are Agnes Burnham, Bea Ciaramitaro, Fair Chairperson, and Rosie Verga.

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CAT Collaborative’s Fall Play, Homestead Crossing Explores the Power of Reflection and Continuity of Self

If you were given a crystal ball at 20-something would you want to see you and your spouse at 50-something? At 50-something would you look back to see your 20-something self  and spouse? Would you have the courage to look at what you would become? Could you endure how you had changed from your youth?

Cape Ann Theatre Collaborative’s fall play, Homestead Crossing, by Sudbury, Mass. native William Donnelly creates a “crystal ball”  to view the 50-something married couple of Noel and Anne with the by-happenstance meeting of 20-something Claudia and Tobin. Both couples reflect each other across the spectrum of aging and remembrance of youth. Each couple transforms the other into deeper knowing and fuller remembrances. The quiet disconnect of comfortable middle age marriage and the youthful exuberance of setting out on a collective dream meet in a  delightful twist! Donnelly’s “jeweler’s eye” explores who we are at the start of relationships and who we are as we age into them. Homestead Crossing abounds with humor, poignance and the deep wisdom of life’s journey when lived fully and honestly. Our cast features Emma Cavaliere as Claudia, Pauline Miceli as Anne, Tom Rash as Tobin and Marc St. Pierre as Noel.

When: November 15, 16, 17, ( 21st Benefit performance for the Lanesville Community Center, 8pm), 22, 23, 24   Fridays/Saturdays 8pm and Sundays 3pm

Where: Gorton Theatre (home of Gloucester Stage Company), 267 E. Main St., Gloucester, MA

General Admission: $15

Door Sales: Cash/Check Only

Reserve: CATcollab@gmail.com

Buy Tickets Online: www.catcollaborative.org

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So If The Next Time You See me I’m Bleeding Profusely From My Face…

You can blame it on my decision to take a shot on some CVS brand disposable razors.

I ran out of  blades for my Gillette Mach III razor blade shaver about a month ago and finally succumbed to the need to buy new ones.  Went to Target and  couldn’t bring myself to spend $32 for 15 razor blades.  Seems insane to me.  Those dinky little Mach III refills cost over $2 each.

So after another full week of using the dull month and a week old razor blade I finally decided I had to suck it up and buy some new blades.  Went to CVS and saw they had a big sale on razor blades and grabbed this deal-

2 four packs of what looks to be the premium CVS brand disposables.  They were $6.99 per pack and if you bought two packs you got $5 back. Basically $14 minus a $5 rebate for 8 disposable razors comes out to just over a buck a razor.  If I’m found days from now dead,  in a pool of blood from multiple deep inflicted razor cut wounds you’ll know why.

What do you buy for shaving products?  Do you go premium Gillette or the cheapest thing possible?  I’d be interested to hear what people are doing these days.

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Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities! ~ Notes from a Gloucester Garden

At this time of year, with the holidays knocking at our doors and the scramble for gift ideas beginning, I try to remember to post excerpts and information about my book Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities! ~ Notes from a Gloucester Garden (which I both wrote and illustrated), and “The Pollinator Garden” lecture that I gave last evening in Pepperel reminded me to do so again this year. My publisher, Mr. Godine, always thanks me for this endeavor!

We sold a good stack of books last night and I was so appreciative for the opportunity to present my program to an interested audience engaged in learning more about the connection between what we plant and the pollinators we invite to our gardens. Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities! speaks to both the greater and smaller concepts in garden-making and is a how-to design tutorial that covers the gamut from creating the framework to what to plant to attract the tiniest of butterflies. The design concepts are universal, and although set in Gloucester, Oh Garden makes for a thoughtful gift for anyone on your holiday gift-giving list!

Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities! sells for only $14.00 on Amazon, which is a $21.00 value off the publisher’s list price of $35.00.

Click here to purchase a copy of Oh Garden.

Front Door Cosmos Kitty ©Kim Smith 2009

From my book’s introduction ~

We all carry within us the image of a home to create and a garden to tend. Perhaps you dream, as I do, of a welcoming haven to foster family bonds and friendships and to rejoice in life’s journey. The garden and the home to which it belongs becomes a memory catcher to weave a life’s tapestry.

To imagine a garden paradise, one must live in one’s home and listen to its own particular music. Gradually, by degrees, the idea of the garden will grow. A home and a garden should look as though they had grown up together and will, when one takes the time and necessary thought. A garden cannot be hurriedly created. Delicious, blissful pleasure is derived from the garden’s use as a continuation of the home.

Our gardens provide a safe harbor from hectic lives, a place to celebrate life and an opportunity to express our creativity. The garden is an inviting sanctuary to guide one through the rhythms and harmonies of the natural world. Planted to nurture the imagination and hearten the soul, a “new” cottage garden is a whimsical, exuberant intermingling of scented flowers and foliage, fresh fruit, and savory herbs.

As a designer, I believe I am here to channel ideas for the benefit of many. This book is my communication of a profound desire to share with readers the immeasurable joy gleaned from creating a personal paradise of one’s own making.

The illustrations are of flowers, songbirds, and butterflies I love to draw and to paint, and selected because they only become more beautiful when intimately observed.

A poetic world lies waiting to be discovered. Let us open the garden gate and take a step within.

Reminder: Ken Duckworth Hosts the Writer’s Book Club on Sunday November 17th

Ken Duckworth ©Kim Smith 2013Ken Duckworth is not only preparing an array of seasonal appetizers, he is also leading the discussion!

Eastern Point Lit House Fall Book Club Calendar

November 17: Ken Duckworth leads a discussion of The Book by Alan Watts. SOLD OUT

Ken Duckworth is the award-winning executive chef of Duckworth’s Bistro, where he focuses on local, seasonal ingredients that supports local industry. Following his passion for all things food, he honed his culinary skills at Saddlebrook Resort in Tampa and The Cloister in Georgia. He has been our gracious host for this series and we are so pleased to have him leading our last discussion of the year.

 

Artist Spotlight Series – Deb Schradieck

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Spotlight on Deb Schradieck

A lifelong artist, Deb studied Illustration at Mass College of Art in Boston, graduating in 1981.

A resident of Westborough (central) MA, she has always craved the sea, and first came to Gloucester as a boater seeking a fun place to spend the weekend, and fell in love with Cape Ann. Now, she and her husband keep their boat at Pier 7 Marina in East Gloucester. This provides a seasonal base and a stepping-stone to living here year-round. This close proximity to the harbor creates good opportunities for photography, which then become references for artwork done later in the studio.

Her first summer in Gloucester, Deb walked into the Weaver Gallery and was so moved by Jeff’s work that she decided right then and there to make painting a priority. Inspired by the island’s natural beauty and dramatic light, and encouraged by the vibrant community of artists and support for the arts, she got to work. She has since produced dozens of watercolor paintings in a realistic style characterized by vivid color and dramatic light.

A full-time Realtor, Deb has, for many years, drawn house portraits in pen and ink that are given to clients as housewarming gifts. Using the same detailed technique and extensive experience in the medium, she created a 2014 Calendar featuring familiar Gloucester scenes in pen and ink.

Deb is an artist member of the North Shore Arts Association and the Rocky Neck Art Colony. Her work is on display seasonally at the Khan Studio/Good Morning Gloucester Gallery and at the Gallery at the Accommodations, also on Rocky Neck. Visit her website at http://www.DebsArtGallery.com.

You can see more of Deb’s work and find her amazing Gloucester 2014 Calendar at The Cultural Center at Rocky Neck, 6 Wonson Street, East Gloucester during the Rocky Neck Holiday Art & Fine Crafts Festival Saturdays and Sundays, Noon-4 PM November 30 – December 29

http://www.rockyneckartcolony.org/winter.php

E.J. Lefavour

Manchester by the Shop – Surfari

As a start to a series highlighting local shops in Manchester, Christian del Rosario at Surfari agreed to be the first victim!

I have wondered for some time, how is it a surf shop can survive in New England, let alone Manchester by the Sea.  What I have been learning is the incredible appeal of SUP or Stand Up Paddle boarding.  As Christian says paddle boards have become the bicycles of water enthusiasts who can purchase racing models, cruising models and boards built for beginners. Manchester with it’s relatively flat waters, islands to visit and proximity to lakes has been perfect. The chances to exercise, explore hard to reach places, enjoy touring and for some explore yoga on a board and even fish are all around Manchester. Taken to the extreme there are organized races and SUP has even started to appear in rivers running rapids!

The surf market is also strong in the area and Christian says that the season is getting underway now. Storm waves that surfers pray for are stronger in the winter months and the season really extends from October to April.

Surfari sells surf boards, paddle boards, shoes, clothing, beach wear, water sport accessories, sunglasses and gifts. Many items are perfect as boating accessories as well.  Boards can be rented and lessons can be scheduled. They have sun shirts (AKA “Rash guards” for those on boards), and other sun protection items. They also have cold weather equipment for those surfers braving the ocean at this time of year.

In addition to lessons and working with the Manchester Parks and Recreation department, Surfari provides programs for adults and children from May to October. Anyone, not just Manchester residents, can participate in these programs so there are many ways to learn and enjoy SUP boarding.

Christian, his wife Nicole and two daughters have returned to Christian’s home town of Manchester after 13 years away. He has specialized in surfing and paddle boards and most recently was in Nantucket where he sold boards and provided lessons. Opening a retail store in Manchester looked like a great opportunity to expand from selling boards to clothing, accessories and all the other items they now sell.

Surfari is located at 26 Central Street in Manchester. Their website is http://www.standuppaddlesurfari.com . Stop in and say “Hi” to Christian and Nicole.

The Four Legged Faithful Playing Nov 23 at Cape Ann Brewery

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The Four Legged Faithful are a band made up of 4 ordinary men who all thrive on playing music together. Their aim is not to play traditional folk or bluegrass music, but instead to create beautiful, heart-felt, and genuine music using traditional folk/bluegrass instruments. They create a sound that is honest and reflects the band’s many musical influences from nearly all genres. All members sing; creating multiple combinations of 2, 3, and 4-part harmonies. All members write and sing songs about their thoughts, families, and the natural world that surrounds them. For a band without a drummer, The Four Legged Faithful achieve an incredible level of intensity using foot percussion and layered rhythms throughout every measure.  Check out this video and go see them on Saturday November 23rd.

Check online for latest information
Check online for latest information

Smoky Mashed Potatoes

PrintAre you looking for a new side dish for your Thanksgiving Dinner?

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Smoky Mashed Potatoes

Ingredients

3 lbs. Russet potatoes peeled and cut into 1½ inch pieces

1 stick salted butter, plus 1 tablespoon

1 cup sour cream

½ cup whole milk

2 cups shredded Smoked Gouda Cheese (reserve ½ cup for topping)

2 teaspoon kosher salt

1 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper

4 scallions diced (reserve 1 for topping)

8 thick cut sliced smoked bacon(reserve 2 slices for topping)

Step-by-Step

1 Fry bacon until crisp, cut/ crumble into bite size pieces, reserve

2 In large sauce pan, place potatoes and 1 teaspoon salt  and enough cold water to cover potatoes by 1 inch, bring to boil over high heat 10-12 minutes or until potatoes are fork tender, strain water in colander return potatoes to hot pan

3 Add 1 stick butter, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon pepper, milk, and sour cream to potatoes, mash well

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4 Add 1 ½ cup cheese, 6 slices crumbled bacon, and 3 diced scallions to mashed potatoes, mix well

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5 Butter 13x9x2 glass baking dish with 1 tablespoon butter, evenly spread mashed potato mixture into prepared dish

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6 Mix reserved bacon, scallion and cheese, scatter over potato mixture

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7 Bake 35 minutes in preheated 375 degree oven, or until mixture is heated throughout and toppings are golden in color; serve warm

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The combination of the smoky cheese and bacon combined with the creamy potatoes, and bite from the scallions are heavenly. I promise your family and guest will love them. My Thanksgiving Recipes are included in my new cookbook “Gifts Of Gold In A Sicilian Kitchen With Sista Felicia, Harvest” to order online click link http://www.storenvy.com/products/2742897-gifts-of-gold-in-a-sicilian-kitchen-with-sista-felicia-harvest  ….Or Stop by The GMG table at  Cruisport Gloucester tomorrow evening where I will be selling my “Gifts Of Gold” at The Girls/Guys Night Out Shopping Extravaganza to help support the GHS Photography Class Fundraiser.

Tractor Trailer for Fish, 1880

Tractor Trailer ready to transport the fish from the beach into town. This is your final clue to yesterday's puzzle. Check out the flag and other details.
Tractor Trailer ready to transport the fish from the beach into town. This is your final clue to yesterday’s puzzle. Check out the flag and other details.

Community Stuff 11/14/13

Hi Joey C.,
While we’re busy planning for our Annual Shopping Stroll on Friday, Dec. 6th, we also wanted to share with GMG readers that some shops in Rockport will be extending their hours for Black Friday and Shop Small Saturday!  We hope to see you in downtown Rockport this Holiday Season!
Thanks!
Dawn @ La Provence
4 Main Street
Rockport, Ma 01966
978.546.5868
www.laprov.com

BlackFridayRockport


Interfaith Celebration with Dr. Jennifer Peace At Temple Ahavat Achim

Sunday, November 17th at 3 pm

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Join us as we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Cape Ann Interfaith Commission!

Come share songs and stories from the different faith traditions.

This celebration will be led by Dr. Jennifer Peace, Assistant Professor of Interfaith Studies, Andover-Newton Theological Seminary & Director of the Inter-religious Center for Public Life. Dr. Peace is also a co-editor of “My Neighbor’s Faith: Stories of Interreligious Encounter, Growth, and Transformation”.

Click here to read the three selections from “My Neighbor’s Faith” from Catholic, Buddhist and Jewish perspectives.

This event is free of charge.


 

Backyard Growers HAS WON $10,000 from Tom’s of Maine!!!!

After a month of intensive on-line voting Backyard Growers came out on top as a winner!!!!

A BIG THANK you to our most awesome Gloucester community for voting up a storm!

We are so lucky to have such amazing community support!

Here’s a link to the full press release:

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/toms-of-maine-announces-nonprofit-winners-in-its-annual-50-states-for-good-community-giving-program-231583101.html

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Your contributions support…

This year, with your support, the Sargent House Museum provided:

  • Educational programs and internships for students and adults.
  • Newly-restored gardens open year-round for public enjoyment.
  • Exciting collections like the John Singer Sargent watercolors and Fitz Henry Lane lithographs.
  • On-going preservation and restoration of a glorious 18th-century home.

Please give generously so that these exciting projects can continue. Donate by check, credit card or Paypal at www.sargenthouse.org.


Christmas Is Coming Ladies!

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If your husband is a hard core fisherman you just know he’d love a chum cutter-

 

All the boats on Wicked Tuna use it-

http://chumcutter.com/

Who is Olive Kitteridge anyway?

Who is Olive Kitteridge anyway?

Patricia Anders submits-

Hi Joey.

I’m a new Gloucester resident who’s 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!).

It’s 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 “Olive Kitteridge,” so I thought maybe they might enjoy reading a book review I wrote about it a few years ago (yes, it was a book—even won a Pulitzer Prize!). Attached is the review that was published in Modern Reformation magazine, of which I am the managing editor (although I’m now also working as an associate editor at Hendrickson over the bridge in Peabody).

Keep up the good work!

All the best,

Patricia


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This review column is subti- tled, “Books Your Neighbors Are Reading,” but I’m thinking  it might need to be called—at least in this case—“Books Your Neighbors Should Be Reading.” I doubt most people race to their newspaper on the day the Pulitzer Prizes are announced (and that goes for the Nobel Prizes as well—
who do you know has read anything by the 2009 literature winner Herta Müller?). 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). I’m 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 year’s Nobel winner Herta Müller or the Pulitzer winner  Elizabeth Strout, let alone have read their prize-winning  books? But aren’t 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 “distinguished fiction  by an American author, preferably dealing with  American life.” According to the Pulitzer  announcement, the prize was awarded to “Olive 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.” But what makes Olive so fas- cinating, and why  do we want to read a story  about a woman “blunt” and “flawed”?
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 “normal” life, but this is the beauty and the power of this story: no one’s life is  ordinary,  especially  Olive’s.  What makes  this  book so compelling is the way Olive impacts the lives around her, whether it’s an in-class comment one of her former students remembers—“Don’t  be scared  of your  hunger. If you’re
scared of your hunger, you’ll  just be one more ninny like everyone else” (195)—or an encounter with Nina, a young woman suffering severely from anorexia nervosa.
Nina’s story, located in the chapter “Starving,” 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 friend’s to collect money for the Red Cross, and breaking in upon what she calls “a tea party” in her usual sarcastic manner, Olive notices the thin- ness of Nina and says to her, “You’re starving.” The girl, quite aware of her condition, responds with an ungracious “Uh- duh.” To which  Olive responds, “I’m starving, too.” Nina doesn’t believe her, but Olive persists: “Sure I am. We all are.” A few moments later, we are told through the eyes of a middle-aged man who also is “starving”:

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, “I don’t know who you are, but young lady, you’re breaking my heart.” It’s not long before Nina is crying with her, leaning against her and whispering, “I don’t want to be like this.”
This scene comes rather as a shock to the reader who is used to Olive’s off-handed insolence—there doesn’t 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 hungry—and perhaps even scared (although she will never confess that she may have become the much-maligned “ninny”). The rest of the story works out the reason for this hunger, and we come to realize that it is really all Olive’s doing. She is stubborn and can’t seem to show love to her husband and her son—at least in the way they need to be loved—and certainly can never admit when she’s wrong. Only too late in life does she finally realize this.
Although she doesn’t seem to support or encourage her husband or son, she somehow gives strength to others— even if it’s merely sitting in the car with  a former student whom she doesn’t 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 it—but I like to think  he didn’t.  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: “Oh, insane, ludicrous, unknowable world! Look how she wanted to live, look how she wanted to hold on” (47).
In the chapter simply named “Tulips” (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 days—she could remember this—when 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  says—now  through  Olive, echoing Kevin’s words above—that this is a “strange and incompre- hensible world.” Olive had given permission to Henry to die, and now she pondered whether or not to plant her tulip bulbs “before the ground was frozen” (162).
After some time has elapsed, in the chapter “Security,” Olive travels to visit her newly remarried son (we’re 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  boats—then  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 water—seen  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 son’s life. (202–3)

Although Olive appears to be a strong woman, we dis- cover that she is frail—emotionally and spiritually. Only at the age of seventy-two, when she begins to lose those she loved, does she realize what she had.  “Sometimes, 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 did” (211).
In the end, Olive reaches out for companionship but pic- tures it as “two slices of Swiss cheese pressed together, such holes they brought to this union—what  pieces life took out of you” (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: “Her eyes were closed, and throughout her tired self swept
waves  of gratitude—and 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 yet” (270).
An interesting “interview” follows the end of the story with  the author, the Random House Reader’s 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: “You may be the writer, Elizabeth, but I think it’s a wacky question, and I’ll tell you something else—it’s none of your damn business. Good-bye people. I have a garden to weed.”
It is my sincere hope that you—and your neighbors—
will  eagerly look for the announcement this spring of the
2010 Pulitzer Prize fiction winner. If the next one is anything like Olive Kitteridge, we’re in for a treat—or as Olive would say, “That’s ducky.”

Patricia Anders is managing editor of Modern Reformation.

 

 

“This thought  causes Olive to nod her head slowly  as she  lies  on the bed. She knows that loneliness can kill people—in different ways can actually make you die. Olive’s private view is that life depends on what she thinks of as ‘big bursts’ and ‘little bursts.’ 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 Bradlee’s, let’s say, or the waitress at Dunkin’  Donuts who knows how you like your coffee. Tricky business, really.”

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout