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Discussion Guide

Oh William!

By Elizabeth Strout

These book club questions are from the Booker Prizes, for which this novel was on the Fiction shortlist in 2022. A full reading guide can be found here and was written by Donna Mackay-Smith.

Book club questions for Oh William! by Elizabeth Strout

Use these discussion questions to guide your next book club meeting.

Strout has often been praised for her realistic narrative voice. In Oh William!, the prose is deliberately pared back. Why do you think this is particularly effective in creating the everyday and something so familiar - and bringing her novels and characters to life?
The structure of Oh William! could be considered unusual. In the opening lines (p.3) Lucy addresses the reader directly, before beginning to recount details of their relationship and lives in a - for the most part - chronological manner. There are also no chapters or definitive sections within the text. Discuss the narrative structure, the author’s intention, and how that shapes your experience as a reader.
When Lucy decides to take William’s surname when they get married, she states: I had spent my whole life not wanting to be me. (p.4). What does Lucy mean by this? What is she trying to escape through the gesture of this name change?
At one point during the novel, Lucy comes to the realisation that William is the only person I ever felt safe with. He is the only home I ever had. (p.38) Why then do you think their relationship ended in divorce?
When Lucy and William’s child is born, they have dinner in a restaurant. Lucy recalls the following interaction on p. 56: ‘You know, Lucy, I think I would feel better if she had been a boy.’ It was as though something dropped deep inside of me, and I did not say anything about it. But I have always remembered that. At the time I thought, ‘Well, at least he is being honest’. But we had these surprises and disappointments with each other, is what I mean. What does Lucy mean by ‘surprises and disappointments’?
William is presented as a character who is often self-interested and checked out. He did not know the names of all the doormen though he had lived in the building for almost fifteen years; this particular doorman was one whose name William could not remember. (p. 57) Discuss how these traits affected his relationships with those closest to him.
William’s mother is a notable figure in the book. Lucy tells us: Catherine, when I first met her, would introduce me to her friends, and she would say quietly with her hand on my arm, ‘This is Lucy. Lucy comes from nothing.’ (p. 47). Discuss this in relation to Catherine’s character arc and why class seems important to her.
Never would I kill myself. I am a mother. As invisible as I feel, I am a mother. (p. 162) What does Lucy mean when she says she feels invisible, and to whom?
The Booker judges said that ‘Lucy Barton is one of literature’s immortal characters - brittle, damaged, unravelling, vulnerable and, most of all, ordinary, like us all.’ Why does Lucy, and her experience, resonate with so many readers?
People are lonely, is my point here. Many people can’t say to those they know well what it is they feel they might want to say. (p. 119) Loneliness and the inability to communicate with those closest to us is a recurring theme in Strout’s novel. Do you think Strout’s depiction of the human condition is realistic?
Both Lucy and William are struggling to make sense of their childhoods and lives together - William’s mother, their children, Lucy’s impoverished upbringing, and so on. To what extent is it a novel about the burden of the past, or how people can never really escape their families, or how loved ones cause one another pain?
How do you think Catherine’s long-kept secret affects William – now or in retrospect – and what does it lead Lucy to understand?

Oh William! Book Club Questions PDF

Click here for a printable PDF of the Oh William! discussion questions