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Monday, April 25, 2016
My Name is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout
To describe the main character in Pulitzer prize winner, Elizabeth Strout's novel, My Name is Lucy Barton, as being lonely is a huge understatement. The narrator and protagonist is possessed by the deep, all encompassing desperation to be loved and to feel connected to the people who fill her life. Lucy wants, even as an adult, to feel that she is accepted and that she is safe. She has managed to escape her pitiable childhood through sheer force of will and her understanding that education is her only ticket out of abject poverty. Lucy finds, however, that she cannot escape her deep feeling of isolation brought on by the prejudice she lived with in her small hometown and her ingrained sense of worthlessness promoted by her emotionally stunted mother and emotionally damaged father. Despite the fact that Lucy has managed to succeed in many ways, she has never been able to develop the emotional bonds she sees in other people. This novel, though relatively short, opens the door to conversations about the isolation brought on by the shame of poverty, the struggles of post traumatic stress syndrome, the fight against prejudice and ridicule. Perhaps even more heartbreaking is the author's uncovering of the unbearable recognition of the mistakes we all make in our relationships with our children and parents, husbands and wives, even brothers and sisters. Elizabeth Strout has been described as an author who writes fiction with the "condensed power of poetry." Her mastery of story telling is clearly on display in her novel My Name is Lucy Barton.
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