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My Name is Lucy Barton
Elizabeth Strout
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Description for My Name is Lucy Barton
Paperback. Num Pages: 208 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 131 x 196 x 19. Weight in Grams: 158.
LONGLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2016 AND THE BAILEYS WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION 2016. A #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER. An exquisite story of mothers and daughters from the Pulitzer prize-winning author of Olive Kitteridge Lucy is recovering from an operation in a New York hospital when she wakes to find her estranged mother sitting by her bed. They have not seen one another in years. As they talk Lucy finds herself recalling her troubled rural childhood and how it was she eventually arrived in the big city, got married and ... Read morehad children. But this unexpected visit leaves her doubting the life she's made: wondering what is lost and what has yet to be found. Look for Elizabeth Strout's highly anticipated new work of fiction, Anything Is Possible, which is available for pre-order now. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
About Elizabeth Strout
Elizabeth Strout is the Pulitzer prize-winning author of Olive Kitteridge, as well as The Burgess Boys, a New York Times bestseller, Abide With Me and Amy and Isabelle, which won the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction and the Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize. She has also been a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Orange Prize. ... Read moreShe lives in New York City and Portland, Maine. Show Less
Reviews for My Name is Lucy Barton
Masterly
Anna Murphy My Name Is Lucy Barton intrigues and pierces with its evocative, skin-peeling back remembrances of growing up dirt-poor.
Ann Treneman
The Times
A novel offering more hope
Daisy Goodwin
Daily Mail
This physically slight book packs an unexpected emotional punch
Simon Heffer
Daily Telegraph
A rich account ... Read moreof a relationship between mother and daughter, the frailty of memory and the power of healing
Mark Damazer
New Statesman
Elizabeth Strout's My Name is Lucy Barton shouldn't work, but its frail texture was a triumph of tenderness, and sent me back to her excellent Olive Kitteridge
Cressida Connolly
The Spectator
In a brilliant year for fiction, I've admired the nuanced restraint of Elizabeth Strout's My Name is Lucy Barton
Hilary Mantel
Guardian Books of the Year
The standout novel of the year - a visceral account of the relations between mother and daughter and the unreliability of memory
Linda Grant
Guardian Books of the Year
I loved My Name is Lucy Barton: she gets better with each book
Maggie O'Farrell
Guardian Books of the Year
A worthy follow-up to Olive Kitteridge
David Nicholls
Guardian Books of the Year
In this quiet, well observed novel, a mother and her mysteriously ill daughter rebuild their relationship in a New York hospital room. Deft and tender, it lingers in the mind
Daily Telegraph Books of the Year
An exquisite novel of careful words and vibrating silences
New York Times Book Review 100 Notable Books of 2016
Elizabeth Strout's Olive Kitteridge is the best novel I've read for some time
David Nicholls Elizabeth Strout's prose is like words doing jazz
Rachel Joyce One of this year's best novels: an intense, beautiful book about a mother and a daughter, and the difficulty and ambivalence of family life
Marcel Theroux Plain and beautiful...Strout writes with an extraordinary tenderness and restraint
Kate Summerscale Sympathetic, subtle and sometimes shocking
Emma Healey Honest, intimate and ultimately unforgettable
Stylist
An exquisitely written story...a brutally honest, absorbing and emotive read
Catholic Universe
This is a glorious novel, deft, tender and true. Read it
Sunday Telegraph
Strout uses a different voice herself in this novel: a spare simple one, elegiac in tone that sometimes brings to mind Joan Didion's
The Tablet
An eerie, compelling novel, its deceptively simple language is a 'slight rush of words' which hold much more than they seem capable of containing...This novel is about the need to create a story we can live with when the real story cannot be told...
Financial Times
Agleam with extraordinary psychological insights...delicate, tender but ruthless reveries
Sunday Express
A beautifully taut novel
Guardian
This short, simple, quiet novel wriggles its way right into your heart and stays there
Red
Her concise writing is a masterclass in deceptive simplicity...Strout writes with an exacting rhythm, with each word and clause perfectly placed and weighted and each sentence as clear and bracing as grapefruit. It's a small masterpiece
Daily Mail
My Name Is Lucy Barton is a short novel about love, particularly the complicated love between mothers and daughters... It evokes these connections in a style so spare, so pure and so profound the book almost seems to be a kind of scripture or sutra, if a very down-to-earth and unpretentious one
Newsday
Slim and spectacular...My Name Is Lucy Barton is smart and cagey in every way. It starts with the clean, solid structure and narrative distance of a fairy tale yet becomes more intimate and improvisational, coming close at times to the rawness of autofiction by writers such as Karl Ove Knausgaard and Rachel Cusk. Strout is playing with form here, with ways to get at a story, yet nothing is tentative or haphazard. She is in supreme and magnificent command of this novel at all times....
Washington Post
This is a book you'll want to return to again and again and again
Irish Independent
Hypnotic...yielding a glut of profoundly human truths to do with flight, memory and longing
Mail on Sunday
My Name is Lucy Barton confirms Strout as a powerful storyteller immersed in the nuances of human relationships... Deeply affecting novel...visceral and heartbreaking...If she hadn't already won the Pulitzer for Olive Kitteridge this new novel would surely be a contender
Observer
So good I got goosebumps... a masterly novel of family ties by one of America's finest writers
Sunday Times
An exquisite novel... in its careful words and vibrating silences, My Name Is Lucy Barton offers us a rare wealth of emotion, from darkest suffering to - 'I was so happy. Oh, I was happy' - simple joy
Claire Messud, New York Times Book Review Strout's best novel yet
Ann Patchett I am deeply impressed. Writing of this quality comes from a commitment to listening, from a perfect attunement to the human condition, from an attention to reality so exact that it goes beyond a skill and becomes a virtue. I have never read her before and I knew within a few sentences that here was an artist to value and respect
Hilary Mantel A heart-wrenching story of mothers and daughters from the Pulitzer prize-winning author of Olive Kitteridge
Publisher's description
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