The Dutch House

by Ann Patchett

Maeve Conroy Character Analysis

Maeve is Danny’s sister. Seven years older than Danny, she takes on a maternal role after their mother, Elna, leaves and their father, Cyril, withdraws. By the time Cyril died, she had already finished college, leaving Danny, Norma, and Bright with sole access to the educational trust he allocated in his will. Determined to limit Andrea’s control, Maeve pushes Danny to attend boarding school, Columbia, and medical school to drain the trust and reduce Andrea’s daughters’ inheritance. Maeve’s resentment for Andrea fuels her lifelong obsession with the Dutch House and refusal to let go of how she has been wronged. Additionally, Maeve remembers Elna vividly and struggles to reconcile her mother’s supposed selflessness with the cruelty of her abandonment. Maeve remains at the same accounting job at Otterson’s Frozen Vegetables for decades, and her boss, Mr. Otterson, grows into a beloved father figure. But her life remains largely defined by loss—of her mother, her home, and the future she might have had. Though she claims she has no regrets, her declining health, worsened by lifelong diabetes and smoking, reveals the toll of her sacrifices. She dies suddenly in her 50s, only a couple of weeks after Elna decides to care for an elderly, sick Andrea in the Dutch House.

Maeve Conroy Quotes in The Dutch House

The The Dutch House quotes below are all either spoken by Maeve Conroy or refer to Maeve Conroy. 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:
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1 Quotes

Though the story will be remembered that Maeve and Andrea were at odds right from the start, that wasn’t true. Maeve was perfectly fair and polite when they met, and she remained fair and polite until doing so was no longer possible.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Andrea Smith, Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 6
Explanation and Analysis:

Because I was fifteen and generally an idiot, I thought that the feeling of home I was experiencing had to do with the car and where it was parked, instead of attributing it wholly and gratefully to my sister.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Andrea Smith, Cyril Conroy, Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House, Smoking
Page Number and Citation: 13
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 2 Quotes

“That’s the strike you have against you. A boy grows up rich like you, never wanting for anything, never being hungry”­­—he shook his head, as if it had been a disappointing choice I’d made—“I don’t know how a person overcomes a thing like that. You can watch these people all you want and see what it’s been like for them, but that’s not the same thing as living it yourself.”

Related Characters: Cyril Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy , Maeve Conroy, Danny Conroy
Page Number and Citation: 19-20
Explanation and Analysis:

After Maeve came home from the hospital things got worse. Logic said our mother’s absence had made her sick, and so logic concluded that further talk of our mother could kill her. The Dutch House grew quiet.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy , Maeve Conroy, Cyril Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 29
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 4 Quotes

“Do you think it’s possible to ever see the past as it actually was?” I asked my sister. We were sitting in her car, parked in front of the Dutch House in the broad daylight of early summer. The linden trees kept us from seeing anything except the linden trees. […]

“I see the past as it actually was,” Maeve said. She was looking at the trees.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 45
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 5 Quotes

Then I remembered what my father had told me, that the things we could do nothing about were best put out of our minds. I gave it a try and found that it was easier than I imagined.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy, Cyril Conroy, Elna Conroy
Page Number and Citation: 70
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

More than school or the basketball court, more than the Dutch House, I was at home on a building site. [...] I loved being part of a building being made.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy, Cyril Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 78
Explanation and Analysis:

The truth was we had come this far and had never given Andrea a thought. Our cruelty became the story: not our father’s death but how we had excluded her from it.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Andrea Smith, Jocelyn, Sandy, Maeve Conroy, Cyril Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 82
Explanation and Analysis:

He had protected me from the world so completely that I had no idea what the world was capable of. I had never thought about him as a child. I had never asked him about the war. I had only seen him as my father, and as my father I had judged him.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Andrea Smith, Maeve Conroy, Cyril Conroy, Elna Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 99
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

I would have loved to have evidence more irrefutable than my own memory, since neither my sister nor my wife would back me on this: it was Maeve who had picked out Celeste, and it was Maeve that Celeste first loved.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy, Celeste Norcross
Page Number and Citation: 138
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 9 Quotes

And so throughout my interminable academic career I suppressed my nature. I did everything that was required of me while keeping a furtive list of the buildings I passed that were for sale: asking price, selling price, weeks on the market.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Dr. Morey Able, Cyril Conroy, Maeve Conroy
Page Number and Citation: 150
Explanation and Analysis:

Women had read about their liberation in books but not many of them had seen what it looked like in action. Celeste had no idea what she was supposed to do with a life that was entirely her own.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy, Celeste Norcross
Page Number and Citation: 156
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 12 Quotes

“Believe me, I know what a bad time everyone went through. I was there. But your mother has a higher calling than we do, that’s all.”

Related Characters: Fluffy (speaker), Danny Conroy, Elna Conroy , Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 201
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 14 Quotes

The fact that we were parked there now was really just an act of nostalgia, not for the people we’d been when we lived in the house, but for the people we’d been when we parked on VanHoebeek Street for hours, smoking cigarettes.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy, Celeste Norcross
Related Symbols: The Dutch House, Smoking
Page Number and Citation: 234
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 15 Quotes

If it was ever going to happen then this would be the day, lost as we had been to The Nutcracker and then the precipitous drop in blood sugar. Celeste had come to her aid, after all, and Maeve had been grateful. Even the oldest angers could be displaced. [...] Upstairs in our own bed, Celeste would tell me it was okay that my sister was here, or better than okay. She’d finally been able to see Maeve as the person I had always known.

“No,” Maeve said. “Drive me home.”

Related Characters: Maeve Conroy (speaker), Danny Conroy (speaker), Celeste Norcross, May Conroy
Page Number and Citation: 248-249
Explanation and Analysis:

There was nothing extraordinary about her. She was a woman I had known in my childhood and now did not know at all, a woman who had, for several years, been married to our father.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Cyril Conroy, Maeve Conroy, Andrea Smith
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 254
Explanation and Analysis:

We had made a fetish out of our misfortune, fallen in love with it. I was sickened to realize we’d kept it going for so long, not that we had decided to stop.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Andrea Smith, Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 255
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 16 Quotes

“You have got to learn to lie.” Her hair had been brushed and I wondered if our mother had brushed it.

“I am lying,” I said. “You can’t believe how well I’m lying.”

“I’m so happy. I’ve just had a heart attack and this has been the happiest day of my life.”

I told her the truth, more or less, that her happiness was all I cared about.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy
Page Number and Citation: 265
Explanation and Analysis:

“You went to India to get away from the house?” Of course it wasn’t just the house or the husband. There were the two children sleeping on the second floor who went unmentioned.

My mother’s pale eyes were clouded by cataracts and I wondered how much she could see. “What else could it have been?”

“I guess I just assumed it was Dad.”

“I loved your father,” she said. The words were right there. She didn’t have to reach for them at all. I loved your father.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy, Fluffy, Sandy, Cyril Conroy, Jocelyn
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 271
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 17 Quotes

Maeve was happy and tired and utterly unlike herself. She didn’t talk about her work at Otterson’s, or what she needed to do for me [...] She sat on the couch and let our mother bring her toast. There was no distance between them, no recrimination. They were living together in their own paradise of memory.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy , Maeve Conroy
Page Number and Citation: 284
Explanation and Analysis:

“I’ve wanted my mother back since I was ten years old, and now she’s here. I can use the time I’ve got to be furious, or I can feel like the luckiest person in the world.”

“Those are the two choices?” I wished we could get in the car and drive over to the Dutch House, just sit by ourselves for a minute even though we didn’t do that anymore.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 296
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 18 Quotes

In my dreams, the intervening years were never kind to the Dutch House. I was certain it would have become something shabby in my absence, the peeling and threadbare remains of grandeur, when in fact nothing of the sort had happened. The house looked the same as it did when we walked out thirty years before.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy , Cyril Conroy, Andrea Smith, Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 309
Explanation and Analysis:

My mother and sister went to the fireplace to stand beneath the VanHoebeeks.

“I hated them,” my mother said quietly, still holding Andrea’s shoes.

Maeve nodded, her eyes on those eyes that had followed us throughout our youth. “I loved them.”

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy (speaker), Maeve Conroy (speaker), Andrea Smith, The VanHoebeeks
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 310
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 20 Quotes

“Hi, Andrea,” I said. No anger could survive this, at least no anger I’d ever had. Andrea was as small as a child.

Related Characters: Danny Conroy (speaker), Elna Conroy , Cyril Conroy, Andrea Smith, Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House
Page Number and Citation: 328
Explanation and Analysis:

We stood there in the grass, watching the young people fluttering in and out of the windows—moths to the light. “My god, I love this so much,” May said.

“It’s your house.”

Related Characters: May Conroy (speaker), Danny Conroy (speaker), Andrea Smith, Norma Smith, Maeve Conroy
Related Symbols: The Dutch House, Smoking
Page Number and Citation: 337
Explanation and Analysis:
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Maeve Conroy Character Timeline in The Dutch House

The timeline below shows where the character Maeve Conroy appears in The Dutch House. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
When eight-year-old Danny and his 15-year-old sister, Maeve, learn from their housekeeper, Sandy, that their father (Cyril Conroy) is expecting a guest, they’re... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Andrea is the first woman Mr. Conroy has dated since Danny and Maeve’s mother, Elna, left years earlier—with the exception of “Fluffy,” or Fiona, the children’s former nanny... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...suggests adding drapes. Years later, during 15-year-old Danny’s first spring break home from boarding school, Maeve drives them both to the Dutch House at dusk, parking across the street and watching.... (full context)
Chapter 2
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...She obsesses over the home, admiring its craftsmanship and beauty. One afternoon, as Danny and Maeve return from Mass, they find her waiting by the pool for Mr. Conroy. They also... (full context)
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...other people’s circumstances. Danny admires his father’s willingness to listen and his sense of responsibility. Maeve, envious that she—the eldest child—doesn’t get to go on these trips, always demands a full... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
In Danny’s youth, Maeve took on a motherly role, and he regrets that no one gave her the same... (full context)
Chapter 3
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
...Conroy’s relationship with Andrea, she introduces her two daughters, Norma and Bright, to Danny and Maeve—who had no idea Andrea had any children. Both a few years younger than 10-year-old Danny,... (full context)
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
On Sunday nights, when Sandy and Jocelyn are off work, Danny, Maeve, and Mr. Conroy eat a pre-prepared dinner together in the kitchen, the smallest room in... (full context)
Chapter 4
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
During Maeve’s freshman year at Barnard, Mr. Conroy marries Andrea in the drawing room of the Dutch... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
In the first months after Andrea moves into the Dutch House, with Maeve away at Barnard, Sandy and Jocelyn try to help Danny feel less lonely. One day,... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Andrea gives Maeve’s bedroom to Norma and moves Maeve upstairs to the third-floor attic while she’s away at... (full context)
Chapter 5
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...following Easter, Danny and his father plan a trip to New York City to visit Maeve at Barnard for the weekend. Mr. Conroy says they’ll go out to lunch and then... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
After Mr. Conroy heads back to Philadelphia, Danny tearfully tells Maeve everything about the Brooklyn visit. Insisting on seeing the apartments for herself, she has Danny... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Maeve shares with Danny the one thing she knows for certain: their mother hated the Dutch... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Flashing ahead to nearly two decades later, Danny visits Maeve in Philadelphia, and they park once again in front of the Dutch House. He notes... (full context)
Chapter 6
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
After Andrea moves Maeve’s bedroom to the attic, Maeve mostly quits staying the night at the Dutch House. She... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
When Danny is called to the principal’s office during class, his first thought is that Maeve has run out of insulin and died. But when he sees Maeve waiting for him,... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
When Danny and Maeve return to the Dutch House, they go straight to the kitchen to tell Sandy and... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...him. In the days that follow, Andrea becomes even more spiteful. She refuses to let Maeve take over the Conroy construction business and takes petty jabs at her, such as criticizing... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
A few weeks after Mr. Conroy’s funeral, Andrea demands that Maeve move Danny out of the Dutch House immediately. The house belongs to her now, she... (full context)
Chapter 7
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Maeve meets with Lawyer Gooch, a longtime friend of Mr. Conroy’s, for legal advice following his... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
The following Sunday, Maeve urges Danny to go to Mass, but he refuses. He maintains that no one is... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Many years later, as Maeve and Danny sit parked in Maeve’s car outside the Dutch House on Easter, Maeve idly... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Flashing back to the day when Maeve drove Danny to  Connecticut to begin his schooling at Choate, Danny recalls feeling unmoored, face-to-face... (full context)
Chapter 8
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...weather is wet and cold, and he thinks about how nice it would be for Maeve to visit him in New York for a change. Since moving back to Philadelphia after... (full context)
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...later, Danny learns she lives in a neighboring suburb. When they get off the train, Maeve is waiting for him. Danny introduces her to Celeste, and as he and Maeve leave... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...later—after Danny and Celeste have married, had two children, and he has left his medical career—Maeve insists she never offered Celeste a ride home. She claims it was Danny who made... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Despite their supposed mutual disdain, Danny clearly remembers how easily Celeste and Maeve got along the first night they met. On the drive home, the women had bonded... (full context)
Chapter 9
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...envisions for himself, he cooperates, committing to his studies because it’s what’s expected of him. Maeve, for her part, refuses to consider any path for her brother other than medical school—not... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Shortly after Danny begins medical school, Maeve calls him one evening with news: Andrea has contacted Lawyer Gooch, accusing the siblings of... (full context)
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Danny immediately visits Maeve to discuss his romantic life, and Maeve is put off by Celeste’s rush to get... (full context)
Chapter 10
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
After securing his first building, Danny floats the idea of quitting his residency to Maeve, but she refuses to allow it. So, he presses on, knowing the end is in... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Flashing back to Danny’s second year at Choate, he recalls playing tennis with Maeve on a rainy afternoon and parking outside the Dutch House afterward. Maeve tells him about... (full context)
Chapter 11
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...of the three buildings he owns there. One day, Sandy calls to tell him that Maeve is in the hospital. He immediately takes the train to Philadelphia, where Celeste—who’s visiting her... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Maeve was hospitalized because of an infection that started as a red mark on her hand... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Maeve says she already told Fluffy that Danny would meet her at a nearby pastry shop.... (full context)
Chapter 12
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...and he holds no resentment toward her. Then Fluffy reveals shocking news that not even Maeve knows: Elna Conroy is alive and has been living in New York. Fluffy ran into... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Before they part, Fluffy asks Danny to promise that he and Maeve will come to dinner and meet her family. As he walks away, he has a... (full context)
Chapter 13
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...remains preoccupied with his fledgling real estate business, leaving much of the wedding planning to Maeve, Celeste, and Celeste’s mother. But Maeve and Celeste struggle to get along. Maeve, aware that... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Early on in Fluffy’s tenure, Celeste learns not to say anything disparaging about Maeve—Fluffy won’t hear it, defending Maeve like her own. One day, Danny asks Fluffy how Mr.... (full context)
Chapter 14
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
As Danny steadily expands his real estate business, he also starts a management company. Maeve handles his bookkeeping and taxes in addition to her longtime bookkeeping job at Otterson’s. Celeste... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
...a significant profit, he reflects on how much he has been afforded and how little Maeve has had in comparison. Now in their 40s, he encourages her to go back to... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
A few years later, Danny and Maeve take a familiar detour one day to the Dutch House. Sitting in the car, Maeve... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Later that night, when Danny recounts Maeve’s story about Elna and the convent to Celeste, she manages to find a way to... (full context)
Chapter 15
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
...a role as one of the soldier mice in the New York City Ballet’s The Nutcracker. Maeve comes into town for the performance, joining Danny and Celeste’s large extended family. During the... (full context)
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
As Maeve slowly recovers, the rest of the family leaves for dinner, and Danny promises Celeste he’ll... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
By four in the morning, Maeve wakes Danny, ready to leave so he can return to New York before sunrise. She... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
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As Danny and Maeve watch the Dutch House, the lights inside slowly flicker on. A few minutes later, a... (full context)
Chapter 16
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
When Maeve is 52, she has a heart attack at work, and Mr. Otterson drives her to... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Danny learns that Fluffy tracked down Elna to let her know about Maeve’s heart attack, believing Maeve should see her mother at least once before one of them... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
...1970, the first time he returned to his hometown after starting medical school. He and Maeve had spent dinner with Celeste’s family and were on their way to Sandy’s. As always,... (full context)
Chapter 17
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
As Maeve recovers in the hospital, she and Elna reminisce about the past—the little home they lived... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
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Once Maeve is discharged, Elna stays with her and Danny at Maeve’s. Elna doesn’t ask about May... (full context)
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Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Projection, Perception, and Reality Theme Icon
Continuing their conversation, Celeste accuses Danny of refusing to let Maeve be happy. She’s convinced he’s afraid of “losing” his sister to Elna, something Danny firmly... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Family Bonds Theme Icon
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As summer ends, Danny’s visits to Philadelphia become less frequent. Elna settles into Maeve’s home, making the guest room her own. One evening, as Danny is about to leave... (full context)
Chapter 18
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
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One year after Maeve’s heart attack, Danny takes the train into Philadelphia to see her and Elna. Over the... (full context)
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Theme Icon
Home, Displacement, and Impermanence Theme Icon
Resentment and Forgiveness Theme Icon
...driven them to the Dutch House. She asks if they’ve been inside since they left. Maeve explains they were never welcome—Andrea made sure of that. But Maeve also admits they used... (full context)
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...to him and sobbing, her shoes falling off in the process. Elna picks them up. Maeve rushes from the car as Danny and Elna explain to the nurse that they are... (full context)
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...down the stairs, apologizing to the nurse. It’s Norma. The moment she sees Danny and Maeve, she recognizes them and, without hesitation, says, “I’m sorry.” She explains, with sincerity, that she... (full context)
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Norma explains that Andrea likely has Alzheimer’s. Andrea, looking at the portrait of young Maeve hanging in the drawing room across from the VanHoebeeks, points to it and says, “My... (full context)
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Elna stays with Andrea while Danny follows Maeve to the car. Maeve pulls out an “emergency” pack of cigarettes, assuring Danny she doesn’t... (full context)
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...Andrea and Norma need her, and she intends to stay and help care for Andrea. Maeve is furious. She argues that their mother should be with her, not with the stepmother... (full context)
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Maeve tells Danny to give her old portrait to May, but he encourages her to keep... (full context)
Chapter 19
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At Maeve’s funeral Mass, Danny realizes that Mr. Otterson’s grief may rival his own. Still, he does... (full context)
Chapter 20
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Three years after Maeve’s death, Danny and Celeste divorce. Without Maeve to blame for Danny’s shortcomings, Celeste was left... (full context)
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...visit the Dutch House, though he is still angry with Elna for moving there after Maeve’s death to care for Andrea. Sandy answers the door—she started coming by after Jocelyn died... (full context)
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...“penance.” For the first time, Danny asks his mother why she didn’t bring him and Maeve along when she left for India. Elna explains she thought the Dutch House was the... (full context)
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...Dutch House from Norma, and Elna stays on as the home’s general caretaker. May returns Maeve’s portrait to its original place in the drawing room, where it once hung for decades... (full context)