Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine

Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine

by

Gail Honeyman

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine makes teaching easy.

Eleanor Oliphant Character Analysis

Eleanor is the novel’s protagonist and narrator. She’s nearly 30, lives in Glasgow, and has worked at the same graphic design company for nearly a decade. She has difficulty understanding social dynamics and makes others uncomfortable with her propensity to say exactly what’s on her mind. Eleanor is lonely and socially isolated. The only regular social outlet she has are her weekly chats with Mummy, though these chats do little to alleviate Eleanor’s loneliness: Mummy is emotionally abusive and berates Eleanor for being pathetic, and chats with her leave Eleanor feeling dejected and unworthy of love. Eleanor’s childhood was traumatic, though for much of the novel she remains unwilling to think about her traumas, choosing to numb her pain with alcohol. The most obvious sign of Eleanor’s trauma is a scar on the right side of her face, which she incurred in a fire her mother set to kill her and her younger sister, Marianne, when Eleanor was 10 years old. Eleanor’s life changes when she and Raymond Gibbons, the graceless but friendly IT guy from her office, help an elderly man who has collapsed in the middle of the road. Grateful for their help, the man, Sammy Thom, embraces Eleanor and Raymond as his friends and invites them into his life. Sammy’s and Raymond’s friendliness is contagious, presenting Eleanor with more opportunities to make friends and socialize. One key feature of Eleanor’s personality is her tendency to project her feelings onto external objects and people. This is especially evident in Eleanor’s fantasy romance with Johnnie Lomond, a local musician. Despite never meeting Johnnie, Eleanor believes that he is her soulmate and that a relationship with him will fix all of her problems. Eleanor uses the idea of Johnnie to fantasize about an escape from her traumas because it is too painful for her to take the psychological steps necessary to overcome these traumas on her own. Ultimately, Eleanor’s coping mechanisms of projection and denial fail her, and she must make the decision to sink deeper into her depression or to seek help and confront her traumas directly. With the help of Raymond and her new therapist, Dr. Maria Temple, Eleanor finds confidence in her own voice and accepts the reality of her traumatic past.

Eleanor Oliphant Quotes in Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine

The Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine quotes below are all either spoken by Eleanor Oliphant or refer to Eleanor Oliphant. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Enduring Impact of Trauma  Theme Icon
).
Good Days: Chapter 1 Quotes

I do exist, don’t I? It often feels as if I’m not here, that I’m a figment of my own imagination. There are days when I feel so lightly connected to the earth that the threads that tether me to the planet are gossamer thin, spun sugar. A strong gust of wind could dislodge me completely, and I’d lift off and blow away, like one of those seeds in a dandelion clock.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 5
Explanation and Analysis:

I have always taken great pride in managing my life alone. I’m a sole survivor—I’m Eleanor Oliphant. I don’t need anyone else—there’s no big hole in my life, no missing part of my own particular puzzle. I am a self-contained entity. That’s what I’ve always told myself, at any rate.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne
Page Number: 7-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 2 Quotes

Should I make myself over from the inside out, or work from the outside in? […] Eventually, I decided to start from the outside and work my way in—that’s what often happens in nature, after all. The shedding of skin, rebirth. Animal, birds and insects can provide such useful insights.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 4 Quotes

“You wouldn’t understand, of course, but the bond between a mother and child, it’s…how best to describe it…unbreakable. The two of us are linked forever, you see—same blood in my veins that’s running through yours. […] However hard you try to walk away from that fact, you can’t, darling, you simply can’t. It isn’t possible to destroy a bond that strong.”

Related Characters: Mummy / Sharon Smyth (speaker), Eleanor Oliphant, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 6 Quotes

[Polly’s] the only constant from my childhood, the only living thing that survived. She was a birthday present, but I can’t remember who gave her to me, which is strange. I was not, after all, a girl who was overwhelmed with gifts.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, June Mullen
Related Symbols: Polly the Plant
Page Number: 50
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 8 Quotes

Jane Eyre. A strange child, difficult to love. A lonely only child. She’s left to deal with so much pain at such a young age—the aftermath of death, the absence of love. It’s Mr. Rochester who gets burned in the end. I know how that feels. All of it.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 72
Explanation and Analysis:

Even the circus freak side of my face—my damaged half—was better than the alternative, which would have meant death by fire. I didn’t burn to ashes. I emerged from the flames like a little phoenix. I ran my fingers over the scar tissue, caressing the contours. I didn’t burn, Mummy, I thought. I walked through the fire and I lived. There are scars on my heart, just as thick, as disfiguring as those on my face. I know they’re there. I hope some undamaged tissue remains, a patch through which love can come in and flow out. I hope.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth
Related Symbols: Fire, Animals
Page Number: 74
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 10 Quotes

I smiled at her. Twice in one day, to be the recipient of thanks and warm regard! I would never have suspected that small deeds could elicit such genuine, generous responses. I felt a little glow inside—not a blaze, more like a small, steady candle.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mrs. Gibbons
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 97-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 12 Quotes

“But you’re not smart, Eleanor. You’re someone who lets people down. Someone who can’t be trusted. Someone who failed. Oh yes, I know exactly what you are. And I know how you’ll end up. Listen, the past isn’t over. The past is a living thing. Those lovely scars of yours—they’re from the past, aren’t they? And yet they still live on your plain little face. Do they still hurt?”

Related Characters: Mummy / Sharon Smyth (speaker), Eleanor Oliphant, Raymond Gibbons, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician, Sammy Thom
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 17 Quotes

Some people, weak people, fear solitude. What they fail to understand is that there’s something very liberating about it; once you realize you don’t need anyone, you can take care of yourself. That’s the thing: it’s best just to take care of yourself. You can’t protect other people, however hard you try.”

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Sammy Thom
Page Number: 134
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 20 Quotes

I realized that such small gestures—the way his mother had made me a cup of tea after our meal without asking, remembering that I didn’t take sugar, the way Laura had placed two biscuits on the saucer when she brought me coffee in the salon—such things could mean so much. I wondered how it would feel to perform such simple deeds for other people. I couldn’t remember. I had done such things in the past, tried to be kind, tried to take care, I knew that I had, but that was before. I tried, and I had failed, and all was lost to me afterward. I had no one to blame but myself.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Sammy Thom, Mrs. Gibbons, Laura, Keith
Page Number: 161-2
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 22 Quotes

I suppose one of the reasons we’re all able to continue to exist for our allotted span in this green and blue vale of tears is that there is always, however remote it might seem, the possibility of change.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 23 Quotes

Grief is the price we pay for love, so they say. The price is far too high.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Sammy Thom
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 26 Quotes

Polly the plant had died that morning. I’m fully aware of how ridiculous that sounds. That plant, though, was the only living link with my childhood, the only constant between life before and after the fire, the only thing, apart from me, that had survived. I’d thought it was indestructible, assumed it would just go on and on, leaves falling off, new ones growing to replace them. I’d neglected my duties these last few weeks, too busy with hospitals and funerals and Facebook to water her regularly. Yet another living thing I’d failed to look after. I wasn’t fit to care for anyone, anything. Too numb to cry, I dropped the plant into the bin, pot, soil and all, and saw that, throughout all these years, it had been clinging on to life only by the slenderest, frailest of roots.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Marianne, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Polly the Plant, Fire
Page Number: 219
Explanation and Analysis:

If someone asks how you are, you are meant to say FINE. You are not meant to say that you cried yourself to sleep last night because you hadn’t spoken to another person for two consecutive days. FINE is what you say.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 226-7
Explanation and Analysis:

These days, loneliness is the new cancer—a shameful, embarrassing thing, brought upon yourself in some obscure way. A fearful, incurable thing, so horrifying that you dare not mention it; other people don’t want to hear the word spoken aloud for fear that they might too be afflicted, or that it might tempt fate into visiting a similar horror upon them.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 227
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 28 Quotes

All the doctor needed to understand was that I was very unhappy, so that she could advise me how best to go about changing that. We didn’t need to start digging around in the past, talking about things that couldn’t be changed.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 238
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 30 Quotes

As always, Mummy was scary. But the thing was, this time—for the first time ever—she’d actually sounded scared too.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 256
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 32 Quotes

Anger was good, she’d said, while I was putting my coat on. If I was finally getting in touch with my anger, then I was starting to do some important work, unpicking and addressing things that I’d buried too deep. I hadn’t thought about it before, but I suppose I’d never really been angry before now. Irritated, bored, sad, yes, but not actually angry.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 263
Explanation and Analysis:

The singer wasn’t ever the point, really; Maria Temple had helped me see that. In my eagerness to change, to connect with someone, I’d focused on the wrong thing, the wrong person. On the charge of being a catastrophic disaster, a failed human being, I was starting to find myself, with Maria’s help, not guilty.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 277
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 34 Quotes

It isn’t annoying, her need—it isn’t a burden. It’s a privilege. I’m responsible. I chose to put myself in a situation where I’m responsible. Wanting to look after her, a small, dependent, vulnerable creature, is innate, and I don’t even have to think about it.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Glen
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 286
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 36 Quotes

The voice in my head—my own voice—was actually quite sensible, and rational, I’d begun to realize. It was Mummy’s voice that had done all the judging, and encouraged me to do so too. I was getting to quite like my own voice, my own thoughts. I wanted more of them. They made me feel good, calm even. They made me feel like me.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 294
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 37 Quotes

“People inherit all sorts of things from their parents, don’t they—varicose veins, heart disease. Can you inherit badness?”

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 296
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 40 Quotes

“Good- bye, Mummy,” I said. The last word. My voice was firm, measured, certain. I wasn’t sad. I was sure. And, underneath it all, like an embryo forming—tiny, so tiny, barely a cluster of cells, the heartbeat as small as the head of a pin, there I was. Eleanor Oliphant. And, just like that, Mummy was gone.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Dr. Maria Temple
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 316
Explanation and Analysis:
Better Days: Chapter 41 Quotes

“In the end, what matters is this: I survived.” I gave him a very small smile. “I survived, Raymond!” I said, knowing I was both lucky and unlucky, and grateful for it.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne
Page Number: 324
Explanation and Analysis:
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Eleanor Oliphant Quotes in Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine

The Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine quotes below are all either spoken by Eleanor Oliphant or refer to Eleanor Oliphant. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Enduring Impact of Trauma  Theme Icon
).
Good Days: Chapter 1 Quotes

I do exist, don’t I? It often feels as if I’m not here, that I’m a figment of my own imagination. There are days when I feel so lightly connected to the earth that the threads that tether me to the planet are gossamer thin, spun sugar. A strong gust of wind could dislodge me completely, and I’d lift off and blow away, like one of those seeds in a dandelion clock.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 5
Explanation and Analysis:

I have always taken great pride in managing my life alone. I’m a sole survivor—I’m Eleanor Oliphant. I don’t need anyone else—there’s no big hole in my life, no missing part of my own particular puzzle. I am a self-contained entity. That’s what I’ve always told myself, at any rate.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne
Page Number: 7-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 2 Quotes

Should I make myself over from the inside out, or work from the outside in? […] Eventually, I decided to start from the outside and work my way in—that’s what often happens in nature, after all. The shedding of skin, rebirth. Animal, birds and insects can provide such useful insights.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 13
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 4 Quotes

“You wouldn’t understand, of course, but the bond between a mother and child, it’s…how best to describe it…unbreakable. The two of us are linked forever, you see—same blood in my veins that’s running through yours. […] However hard you try to walk away from that fact, you can’t, darling, you simply can’t. It isn’t possible to destroy a bond that strong.”

Related Characters: Mummy / Sharon Smyth (speaker), Eleanor Oliphant, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 6 Quotes

[Polly’s] the only constant from my childhood, the only living thing that survived. She was a birthday present, but I can’t remember who gave her to me, which is strange. I was not, after all, a girl who was overwhelmed with gifts.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, June Mullen
Related Symbols: Polly the Plant
Page Number: 50
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 8 Quotes

Jane Eyre. A strange child, difficult to love. A lonely only child. She’s left to deal with so much pain at such a young age—the aftermath of death, the absence of love. It’s Mr. Rochester who gets burned in the end. I know how that feels. All of it.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 72
Explanation and Analysis:

Even the circus freak side of my face—my damaged half—was better than the alternative, which would have meant death by fire. I didn’t burn to ashes. I emerged from the flames like a little phoenix. I ran my fingers over the scar tissue, caressing the contours. I didn’t burn, Mummy, I thought. I walked through the fire and I lived. There are scars on my heart, just as thick, as disfiguring as those on my face. I know they’re there. I hope some undamaged tissue remains, a patch through which love can come in and flow out. I hope.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth
Related Symbols: Fire, Animals
Page Number: 74
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 10 Quotes

I smiled at her. Twice in one day, to be the recipient of thanks and warm regard! I would never have suspected that small deeds could elicit such genuine, generous responses. I felt a little glow inside—not a blaze, more like a small, steady candle.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mrs. Gibbons
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 97-8
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 12 Quotes

“But you’re not smart, Eleanor. You’re someone who lets people down. Someone who can’t be trusted. Someone who failed. Oh yes, I know exactly what you are. And I know how you’ll end up. Listen, the past isn’t over. The past is a living thing. Those lovely scars of yours—they’re from the past, aren’t they? And yet they still live on your plain little face. Do they still hurt?”

Related Characters: Mummy / Sharon Smyth (speaker), Eleanor Oliphant, Raymond Gibbons, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician, Sammy Thom
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 17 Quotes

Some people, weak people, fear solitude. What they fail to understand is that there’s something very liberating about it; once you realize you don’t need anyone, you can take care of yourself. That’s the thing: it’s best just to take care of yourself. You can’t protect other people, however hard you try.”

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Sammy Thom
Page Number: 134
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 20 Quotes

I realized that such small gestures—the way his mother had made me a cup of tea after our meal without asking, remembering that I didn’t take sugar, the way Laura had placed two biscuits on the saucer when she brought me coffee in the salon—such things could mean so much. I wondered how it would feel to perform such simple deeds for other people. I couldn’t remember. I had done such things in the past, tried to be kind, tried to take care, I knew that I had, but that was before. I tried, and I had failed, and all was lost to me afterward. I had no one to blame but myself.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Sammy Thom, Mrs. Gibbons, Laura, Keith
Page Number: 161-2
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 22 Quotes

I suppose one of the reasons we’re all able to continue to exist for our allotted span in this green and blue vale of tears is that there is always, however remote it might seem, the possibility of change.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Good Days: Chapter 23 Quotes

Grief is the price we pay for love, so they say. The price is far too high.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Sammy Thom
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 26 Quotes

Polly the plant had died that morning. I’m fully aware of how ridiculous that sounds. That plant, though, was the only living link with my childhood, the only constant between life before and after the fire, the only thing, apart from me, that had survived. I’d thought it was indestructible, assumed it would just go on and on, leaves falling off, new ones growing to replace them. I’d neglected my duties these last few weeks, too busy with hospitals and funerals and Facebook to water her regularly. Yet another living thing I’d failed to look after. I wasn’t fit to care for anyone, anything. Too numb to cry, I dropped the plant into the bin, pot, soil and all, and saw that, throughout all these years, it had been clinging on to life only by the slenderest, frailest of roots.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Marianne, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Polly the Plant, Fire
Page Number: 219
Explanation and Analysis:

If someone asks how you are, you are meant to say FINE. You are not meant to say that you cried yourself to sleep last night because you hadn’t spoken to another person for two consecutive days. FINE is what you say.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 226-7
Explanation and Analysis:

These days, loneliness is the new cancer—a shameful, embarrassing thing, brought upon yourself in some obscure way. A fearful, incurable thing, so horrifying that you dare not mention it; other people don’t want to hear the word spoken aloud for fear that they might too be afflicted, or that it might tempt fate into visiting a similar horror upon them.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 227
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 28 Quotes

All the doctor needed to understand was that I was very unhappy, so that she could advise me how best to go about changing that. We didn’t need to start digging around in the past, talking about things that couldn’t be changed.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Johnnie Lomond / The Musician
Page Number: 238
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 30 Quotes

As always, Mummy was scary. But the thing was, this time—for the first time ever—she’d actually sounded scared too.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 256
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 32 Quotes

Anger was good, she’d said, while I was putting my coat on. If I was finally getting in touch with my anger, then I was starting to do some important work, unpicking and addressing things that I’d buried too deep. I hadn’t thought about it before, but I suppose I’d never really been angry before now. Irritated, bored, sad, yes, but not actually angry.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 263
Explanation and Analysis:

The singer wasn’t ever the point, really; Maria Temple had helped me see that. In my eagerness to change, to connect with someone, I’d focused on the wrong thing, the wrong person. On the charge of being a catastrophic disaster, a failed human being, I was starting to find myself, with Maria’s help, not guilty.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Johnnie Lomond / The Musician, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 277
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 34 Quotes

It isn’t annoying, her need—it isn’t a burden. It’s a privilege. I’m responsible. I chose to put myself in a situation where I’m responsible. Wanting to look after her, a small, dependent, vulnerable creature, is innate, and I don’t even have to think about it.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Glen
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 286
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 36 Quotes

The voice in my head—my own voice—was actually quite sensible, and rational, I’d begun to realize. It was Mummy’s voice that had done all the judging, and encouraged me to do so too. I was getting to quite like my own voice, my own thoughts. I wanted more of them. They made me feel good, calm even. They made me feel like me.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 294
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 37 Quotes

“People inherit all sorts of things from their parents, don’t they—varicose veins, heart disease. Can you inherit badness?”

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Dr. Maria Temple
Page Number: 296
Explanation and Analysis:
Bad Days: Chapter 40 Quotes

“Good- bye, Mummy,” I said. The last word. My voice was firm, measured, certain. I wasn’t sad. I was sure. And, underneath it all, like an embryo forming—tiny, so tiny, barely a cluster of cells, the heartbeat as small as the head of a pin, there I was. Eleanor Oliphant. And, just like that, Mummy was gone.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne, Dr. Maria Temple
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number: 316
Explanation and Analysis:
Better Days: Chapter 41 Quotes

“In the end, what matters is this: I survived.” I gave him a very small smile. “I survived, Raymond!” I said, knowing I was both lucky and unlucky, and grateful for it.

Related Characters: Eleanor Oliphant (speaker), Raymond Gibbons, Mummy / Sharon Smyth, Marianne
Page Number: 324
Explanation and Analysis: