Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine is a book that creeps up on you. At first, I felt a little uncomfortable looking at the life of an exceptionally socially inept individual who is a constant source of amusement to her work colleagues. She is a creature of habit - wearing the same outfit to work each day, eating the same lunch and spending every weekend in a solitary vodka-induced haze. The only real contact she has with another human is via a mid-week phone call with her Mother - but there is no comfort to be found there. There's no love in her life and no friendship either, but she seems "completely fine" with this. And why not? She has never experienced these things so how could she possibly miss them? So far, so seemingly bleak. But do not abandon hope, for author
Gail Honeyman works her magic, and brings you into Eleanor's world bit by bit until you start to understand why she is the way she is, and a wave of empathy washes over you. When an unexpected friendship develops with Raymond, the IT guy from work, Eleanor starts to broaden her horizons and finally starts to face up to the past which has shaped her life and left her with deep mental scars. This is, at times, a painful read, but is also funny and heart warming without any fear of it getting sickly sweet. Eleanor is a fantastic character and one that I suspect many of us will recognise - we all know someone who seems a little bit odd! However, this is a celebration of and a reminder to us all that small acts of kindness to people you meet might just save someone. So worth the effort, I thoroughly recommend this book to one and all. It truly deserves all the plaudits it has received and has earned its place at the top of the bestseller lists.
POPSUGAR Challenge 2018 prompt 16: A book about mental health.
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 400 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from library as an ebook.
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, unabridged audio CD, ebook.
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