Play Audiobook Sample
The Burgess Boys: A Novel Audiobook
Play Audiobook Sample
Quick Stats About this Audiobook
Total Audiobook Chapters:
Longest Chapter Length:
Shortest Chapter Length:
Average Chapter Length:
Audiobooks by this Author:
Synopsis
Family is the one thing that drives people apart, and then brings them back together again. The Burgess Boys follows one family through the ups and downs of life, and readers get to see whether the trials of this family will perpetuate their differences, or bring them together for the sake of their family.
Siblings Susan, Jim, and Bob Burgess grew up in Shirley Falls, Maine, and have spent their childhood trying to heal from the scars of having their father tragically taken from them in an unexpected accident. Jim works hard to outgrow his small town, becoming a successful lawyer who escapes to New York City to live and work among the ultra-professional movers and shakers. He is among the top of the corporate world, and often belittles his brother Bob, who also moved to New York, but helps the needy in his legal aid position. Only Susan stayed in their small hometown to raise her own family, regretting the distance that has developed among the siblings since growing up and going their separate ways.
This all changes when Susan's teenage son takes a prank too far and finds himself in legal trouble. Susan swallows her pride and asks her brothers for help. Who will return to Shirley Falls to support the family? The hotshot corporate lawyer or the tender-hearted brother who buries himself in the legal troubles of others? The incident draws the entire family back together, but being together doesn't mean they are unified. Old hurts and current offenses must be worked through if the family is going to work together in this trial. Will the bonds of family and love be enough to overcome the issues?
Author Elizabeth Strout splits her time between New York City and Maine, the two places that inspire her to write the most. Her first novel, Amy and Isabelle, received a great deal of attention, and was eventually made into a television movie by Harpo Studios. In 2009 Strout published Olive Kitteridge, a collection of short stories. The collection earned Strout a Pulitzer Prize.
“No one should be surprised by the poignancy andemotional vigor of Elizabeth Strout’s new novel. But the broad social andpolitical range of The Burgess Boysshows just how impressively this extraordinary writer continues to develop…She’sparticularly adept at subverting our prejudices, complicating our easyjudgments of people we think we know…There seems no limit to her sympathy, herability to express, without the acrid tone of irony, our selfish, needyanxieties that only family can aggravate—and quell.”
— Washington Post
Quotes
-
“[Strout’s] extraordinary narrative gifts are evident again…At times [The Burgess Boys is] almost effortlessly fluid, with superbly rendered dialogue, sudden and unexpected bolts of humor, and…startling riffs of gripping emotion.”
— Associated Press -
“Reading an Elizabeth Strout novel is like peering into your neighbor’s windows…There is a nuanced tension in the novel, evoked by beautiful and detailed writing. Strout’s manifestations of envy, pride, guilt, selflessness, bigotry, and love are subtle and spot-on.”
— Minneapolis Star Tribune -
Strout’s prose propels the story forward with moments of startlingly poetic clarity.
— The New Yorker -
Elizabeth Strout’s first two books, Abide with Me and Amy and Isabelle, were highly thought of, and her third, Olive Kitteridge, won the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. But The Burgess Boys, her most recent novel, is her best yet.
— The Boston Globe -
Strout’s greatest gift as a writer, outside a diamond-sharp precision that packs 320 fast-paced pages full of insight, is her ability to let the reader in on all the rancor of her characters without making any of them truly detestable. . . . Strout creates a portrait of an American community in turmoil that’s as ambitious as Philip Roth’s American Pastoral but more intimate in tone.
— Time -
[Strout’s] extraordinary narrative gifts are evident again. . . . At times [The Burgess Boys is] almost effortlessly fluid, with superbly rendered dialogue, sudden and unexpected bolts of humor and . . . startling riffs of gripping emotion.
— Associated Press -
[Strout] is at her masterful best when conjuring the two Burgess boys. . . . Scenes between them ring so true.
— San Francisco Chronicle -
No one should be surprised by the poignancy and emotional vigor of Elizabeth Strout’s new novel. But the broad social and political range of The Burgess Boys shows just how impressively this extraordinary writer continues to develop.
— The Washington Post -
What truly makes Strout exceptional—and her latest supple and penetrating novel so profoundly affecting—is the perfect balance she achieves between the tides of story and depths of feeling. . . . Every element in Strout’s graceful, many-faceted novel is keenly observed, lustrously imagined and trenchantly interpreted.
— Chicago Tribune -
Strout deftly exposes the tensions that fester among families. But she also takes a broader view, probing cultural divides. . . . Illustrating the power of roots, Strout assures us we can go home again—though we may not want to.
— O: The Oprah Magazine -
Reading an Elizabeth Strout novel is like peering into your neighbor’s windows. . . . There is a nuanced tension in the novel, evoked by beautiful and detailed writing. Strout’s manifestations of envy, pride, guilt, selflessness, bigotry and love are subtle and spot-on.
— Minneapolis Star Tribune -
Strout conveys what it feels like to be an outsider very well, whether she’s delving into the quiet inner lives of Somalis in Shirley Falls or showing how the Burgess kids got so alienated from one another. But the details are so keenly observed, you can connect with the characters despite their apparent isolation. . . . [A] gracefully written novel. [Grade:] A.
— Entertainment Weekly -
Wincingly funny, moving, wise.
— Good Housekeeping -
With her signature lack of sentimentality, a boatload of clear-eyed compassion and a penetrating prose style that makes the novel riveting, Strout tells the story of one Maine family, transformed. Again and again, she identifies precisely the most complex of filial emotions while illuminating our relationships to the larger families we all belong to: a region, a city, America and the world.
— More -
The Burgess Boys returns to coastal Maine [with] a grand unifying plot, all twists and damage and dark, morally complex revelations. . . . The grand scale suits Strout, who now adds impresario storytelling at book length to the Down East gift for plainspoken wisdom.
— Town & Country -
“Nobody does buried conflict and tortured familial relations better than Strout.”
— Amazon.com, editorial review -
“Strout conveys what it feels like to be an outsider very well, whether she’s delving into the quiet inner lives of Somalis in Shirley Falls or showing how the Burgess kids got so alienated from one another. But the details are so keenly observed, you can connect with the characters despite their apparent isolation…[A] gracefully written novel.”
— Entertainment Weekly -
“Strout excels in constructing an intricate web of circuitous family drama, which makes for a powerful story.”
— Publishers Weekly -
“Strout deftly exposes the tensions that fester among families. But she also takes a broader view, probing cultural divides…Illustrating the power of roots, Strout assures us we can go home again—though we may not want to.”
— O, The Oprah Magazine
Awards
-
Selected for the April 2013 Indie Next List
-
A USA Today bestseller
-
An AudioFile Editors’ Pick for New Titles in April 2013
-
An Amazon Best Book of the Month, March2013
-
A New York Times bestseller
-
A 2013 Washington Post Notable Book
-
A 2013 New York Times Editor’s Choice
-
A Publishers Weekly bestseller
-
A Wall Street Journal bestseller
-
A 2013 Entertainment Weekly “Must Read”
-
An NPR bestseller
The Burgess Boys Listener Reviews
Be the first to write a review about this audiobook!
About Elizabeth Strout
Elizabeth Strout is the New York Times bestselling author of numerous award–winning novels, including Olive Kitteridge, winner of the Pulitzer Prize. She has also won the Story Prize, the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award, and the Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize. She has been a finalist for the Booker Prize, PEN/Faulkner Award, and the Orange Prize in London.
About Cassandra Campbell
Cassandra Campbell has won multiple Audie Awards, Earphones Awards, and the prestigious Odyssey Award for narration. She was been named a “Best Voice” by AudioFile magazine and in 2018 was inducted in Audible’s inaugural Narrator Hall of Fame.