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      • Olive Kitteridge is a collection of thirteen short stories, essentially a "novel in stories," linked by the character Olive Kitteridge. What makes Olive striking is the variation in her roles throughout the book. In some of the stories, Olive is the main character.
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  2. Olive Kitteridge is a 2008 novel or short story cycle by American author Elizabeth Strout. Set in Maine in the fictional coastal town of Crosby, it comprises 13 stories that are interrelated but narratively discontinuous and non-chronological. Olive Kitteridge is a main character in some stories and has a lesser or cameo role in others.

    • Pharmacy. Henry Kitteridge, husband of Olive Kitteridge, is a pharmacist. He hires a shop assistant, Denise Thibodeau. Denise is 22, plain and newly married for one year (to a man who is coincidentally also named Henry).
    • Incoming Tide. Kevin Coulson sits in his car near the marina, contemplating suicide. As a child, his mother committed suicide, and he was the one who found her body.
    • The Piano Player. Angela O’Meara is in her fifties and plays piano at the local cocktail lounge. She’s a bit of a closed off person and keep people at a distance.
    • A Little Burst. At 38, Christopher Kitteridge (son of Olive and Henry) gets married to a nice woman and gastroenterologist, Suzanne Bernstein, after only knowing her about six weeks.
    • "The Piano Player"
    • "A Little Burst"
    • "Starving"
    • "A Different Road"
    • "Winter Concert"
    • "Tulips"
    • "Basket of Trips"
    • "Ship in A Bottle"
    • "Security"
    • "Criminal"

    Angela (Angie) O'Meara, the main character in "The Piano Player," has beenplaying piano four evenings a week in the Warehouse Bar & Grill for overtwenty years. Angie loves playing piano—she taught herself, starting at fouryears old, and never had a lesson—but she gets stage fright every time sheplays, and so comes to work somewhat drunk every eveni...

    "A Little Burst" takes its title from one of Olive's beliefs about life:there are "big bursts" of energy (e.g., having kids) in life that arevery important but somewhat dangerous, and there are "little bursts" (e.g., awaitress at a coffee shop recognizing you) that get you through the day. "ALittle Burst" is set a few hours after one of the big bur...

    Harmon overhears a young couple on the street and finds them charming. Thecouple later gets into trouble with the law, and then breaks up. The girl, NinaWhite, ends up coming to Daisy Foster for emotional support. Harmon and Daisyare lovers, and when he comes over to visit Daisy one Sunday morning inNovember, he finds that Nina is there. They try t...

    Olive and Henry Kitteridge go out to dinner one evening. After dinner, Olivedesperately needs to go to the bathroom. They cannot find a place, so Henrystops at the hospital. When Olive asks to use the restroom, the doctors thereinsist on checking her health, especially for allergies to crab. Just afterOlive has changed into a hospital gown, two men...

    Jane and Bob Houlton are on an evening out. They go to a Christmas concertat St. Catherine's. During a break in the music, they talk with their oldfriends Allan and Donna Granger, whom they call the "Lydias" after the name oftheir daughter. During the talk, Mrs. Lydia mentions having run into Bob at theMiami airport. When the concert begins again, ...

    In "Tulips," families are fractured by unexpected events. The Kitteridgesare trying to deal with Christopher moving away and Henry retiring from workingat the pharmacy—and then Henry has a stroke and has to be put into a nursinghome. Christopher comes back to visit, but seeing Henry in the nursing homemakes him uncomfortable; when he returns to Cal...

    "Basket of Trips" takes place the day of Eddie Bonney's funeral and is setat and around his wake. His wife, Marlene, mentions the "basket of trips,"giving this story its title in reference to her husband and trying to sum uphis passing after a lingering illness. For Marlene, the story is about comingto terms with her loss and getting through the da...

    "Ship in a Bottle" is a story of upheaval for the Harwood family. It opensfour days after their eldest daughter, Julie, was supposed to get married. Sheand Bruce, her fiancé, had gone as far as taking the limousine to thechurch, but then they talked and called off the wedding. Julie's mother, AnitaHarwood, is very upset as a result, and continues t...

    Olive's son, Christopher, has remarried and moved to New York City. His newwife, Ann, is pregnant and has children from a previous marriage, soChristopher asks Olive to come visit to help out. Olive flies to New York. Itis the first time she has flown alone and the only time she has been to NewYork City. Once she is there, she finds her new daughte...

    "Criminal" tells the story of Rebecca Brown's stalled life. It starts theday she steals a magazine from her doctor's office and follows her through aseries of mundane and fairly frustrating acts. She orders a shirt for herboyfriend over the phone, then calls back repeatedly to discuss the order withthe clerk. She applies for new jobs but ruins her ...

  3. Olive Kitteridge is an American television miniseries based on Elizabeth Strout's 2008 novel Olive Kitteridge. Set in Maine, the HBO miniseries features Frances McDormand as the title character, Richard Jenkins as Olive's loving husband Henry Kitteridge, Zoe Kazan as Denise Thibodeau, and Bill Murray as Jack Kennison.

  4. Overview. Published in 2008, Olive Kitteridge is an unconventional novel by Elizabeth Strout that interlinks 13 tales about the people of Crosby, Maine. The novel is a collection of short stories tied together by the unifying element of titular character Olive Kitteridge.

  5. Oct 30, 2014 · Few films have tapped into the seemingly conflicting emotions that exist in the human soul at exactly the same moment as HBO’s stellar “Olive Kitteridge,” a delicate, beautiful mini-series starring Frances McDormand, Richard Jenkins, Rosemarie DeWitt, Peter Mullan, Bill Murray and more.

  6. Jan 21, 2020 · Olive Kitteridge, Strout's Puliter Prize-winning novel, tells a series of interrelated narratives that involve, sometimes more directly and other times only peripherally, Olive Kitteridge, a woman living in the fictional coastal town of Crosby, Maine. Olive is an "unlikeable" woman.

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