Elizabeth Strout is the Pulitzer prize-winning author of My Name is Lucy Barton, Anything is Possible, Oh William!, Amy and Isabelle, Abide With Me, The Burgess Boys, Olive Kitteridge, and Olive, Again. She has been nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award, the International Dublin Literary Award, the Orange Prize and the Booker Prize. She lives in Maine.
Stunningly universal . . . with brilliant acuity, Strout has seized
on the parallels between Lucy Barton's pervasive sense of
alienation and the way the recent global crisis has exposed the
helplessness felt by ordinary people everywhere
*Daily Telegraph, 5 stars*
[Strout's] novels, intricately and painstakingly crafted, overlap
and intertwine to create an instantly recognizable fictional
landscape . . . you don't so much read a Strout novel as inhabit
it
*Guardian*
A superbly gifted storyteller and a craftswoman in a league of her
own
*Hilary Mantel*
I cannot get Lucy Barton out of my head
*The Times*
Strout's portrait of a divorced couple united by worry for their
two grown daughters illuminates a refreshingly unexplored angle of
Covid . . . They leap off the page along with their creator's salty
wit and a phantom scent of hand sanitizer
*New York Times*
Elizabeth Strout is one of my very favourite writers
*Ann Patchett*
It's no secret that Elizabeth Strout is a stunning writer, but I
still find myself amazed at the depth she brings to the world of
her stories centered on Lucy Barton
*The Week*
Lucy by the Sea holds a mirror up to everything we have been
through recently. Not only reflecting disbelief, isolation and how
different and at the same time similar we are to each other, but
also what happens to human relationships when we can't be together.
Superb
*Claire Fuller, author of Unsettled Ground*
An unflinching depiction of the ways we are all alone . . .
Strout's most distinctive skill - the ability to render every
character, big or small, with precision - is on full display . . .
Lucy finds love in the novel, but Strout never looks away from the
loneliness that is inherent in being human: "We all live with
people - and places - and things that we have given great weight
to. But we are all weightless in the end."
*Prospect*
[Strout] has that rare ability to immerse readers in the world of
her characters . . . moments of quiet revelation - infidelities, or
glimpses into the indignities of incontinence and cancer - feel
poignant and real, but also unsentimental. It is a compassionate,
life-affirming read, and a much-needed balm for these trying
times
*Straits Times*
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