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deceased father. Isabelle has conflicting feelings about the relationship as it was the last time she was sexually intimate with a man, but also the ensuing pregnancy derailed her plans to become a teacher. Her uncertainty and loneliness cause her to reach out to her coworkers and begin to bond with some of them.
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Isabelle does finally tell Amy about her father and to her surprise Amy is excited by the fact that she has three paternal siblings. Isabelle reaches out to them on Amy's behalf and learns that after the death of their father the family is now ready to accept Amy. Both mother and daughter go to meet
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When one of
Isabelle's coworkers discovers her husband is leaving her for another woman, Isabelle allows her to spend the night at her home. The same night Amy and her friend's ex-boyfriend accidentally discover the body of a young girl who had gone missing months earlier. Distressed Amy tracks down
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Amy goes to work in the mill and the mother-daughter duo outwardly pretend that nothing has changed in their relationship. However the incident causes
Isabelle to reflect back on the circumstances of Amy's birth as she was groomed into a sexual relationship as a teenager by the married friend of her
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and commented that although the book was not perfect, it was "such an eloquent, captivating novel that its occasional missteps don't much signify. By focusing on the ''confluence of different longings'' that bedevils her characters into harming and helping one another, Strout makes the drab little
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A year previously Amy's math teacher was replaced by a substitute, Mr. Robertson. Amy becomes attracted to him after he singles her out for her beautiful gold curly hair and tells her that she looks like a poet. After maneuvering her way into detention with him the two begin to spend time with one
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Meanwhile, the physical relationship between Amy and her older math teacher, Mr. Robertson progresses. They are eventually caught by Avery Clark, Isabelle's boss, who finds a nude Amy and Mr. Robertson in the car and informs
Isabelle what he has seen. Isabelle feels angry at Mr. Robertson, but is
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Mr. Robertson and is horrified that he refuses to acknowledge her. The two incidents cause
Isabelle to confide in her friends about the circumstances of Amy's birth and her guilt over having had an affair with an older married man. Isabelle's friends encourage her to reveal the truth to Amy.
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When she is 16 years old, Amy goes to work at her mother's office, working in the office part of a mill in
Shirley Falls. The two had previously had a close relationship, but their current relationship is strained and Amy is disdainful of her mother, who she sees as an awkward outsider.
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also jealous of her daughter for having a sexual relationship. She persuades Mr. Robertson to leave by threatening to report him to the police as Amy is underage. Returning home she cuts off Amy's hair in a fit of rage, causing a rift between mother and daughter.
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Amy's new family. While Amy is excited, Isabelle feels that Amy is no longer "her" daughter and now belongs to other people allowing her to consider what living for and by herself will be like.
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The novel follows the close relationship between
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Isabelle meanwhile begins to sense that her daughter is ashamed of her as she never graduated from college. She begins to try to self improve by reading.
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another after school, eventually progressing to Mr. Robertson driving Amy home and eventually kissing her.
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and is set in the fictional town of
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Critical reception for the novel has been positive and the book received praise from
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had acquired the rights to the work, with the intent to make a film through
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were brought on to portray
Isabelle and Amy Goodrow. The film aired on
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on March 4, 2001. Critical reception for the film was mixed.
416:"Fiction Book Review: Amy and Isabelle by Elizabeth Strout"
303:"'AMY AND ISABELLE' ENTERS A NEW CHAPTER, AS OPRAH FILM"
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1998 debut novel by the
American author Elizabeth Strout
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as part of the "Oprah
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286:References
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109:0375501347
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