7/2/2023 0 Comments Lucy barton by the seaTo readers of Strout’s previous books, it’s all unduly familiar, indeed stale, an impression reinforced when the author takes a searing emotional turning point from The Burgess Boys (2013) and a painful refusal of connection in Oh William! and recycles them as peripheral plot points. Within this broad story arc, Lucy’s narration rambles from topic to topic: her newfound closeness with William his unfaithfulness when they were married their two daughters’ marital and health issues her growing friendship with Bob Burgess the surprise reappearance of William’s half sister, Lois and memories of Lucy’s impoverished childhood, troubled relations with her parents, and ongoing difficulties with her sister, Vicky. Fatigue and disorientation are natural responses to a cataclysmic upheaval like the coronavirus, but unfortunately, it’s Strout’s imagination that seems exhausted in this meandering tale, which follows Lucy and William to Maine, relates their experiences there in haphazard fashion, and closes with their return to New York. This is the third time Lucy has chronicled the events and emotions that shape her life, and the voice that was so fresh and specific in My Name Is Lucy Barton (2016), already sounding rather tired in Oh, William! (2021), is positively worn out here. Lucy Barton flees pandemic-stricken New York City for Maine with ex-husband William.
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