Lucy Barton is a key character in Anything is Possible, but this is not her story. She is the glue that holds these disparate stories together. Lucy is only a direct part of one of the stories. One thing that Strout says in the interview at the end of the book was about Olive Kitteridge but I think it applies to Anything Is Possible as well.
I'm interested in different points of view, and that's fun to do in a small town. I just love how, in a small town, we think we know someone, but we only know them this way, and someone else knows them that way. That was interesting to me, initially, as a way to give readers a break. But then as I made these characters I realized that they are living people who happen to know Olive in their own way.
In many ways, Anything is Possible is like a collection of short stories rather than a long narrative. There are stories about mothers leaving, about going from rags to riches, about different directions that the lives of siblings take.
Like My Name is Lucy Barton, Anything Is Possible is written in Strout's sparse, stream of consciousness style. It wasn't quite as short as Lucy Barton but it was an equally quick read. The fact that I've already downloaded Oh William! which is the next book in the Amagash "series" where we get to learn a lot more about Lucy's ex-husband, William. I've also but a hold on Lucy by the Sea (Amagash #4) which I'm expecting to be available in about 12 weeks. That should tell you all you need to know.
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