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Excerpt from The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout, plus links to reviews, author biography & more

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The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout

The Things We Never Say

A Novel

by Elizabeth Strout
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  • May 5, 2026, 224 pages
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About this Book

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1

It was the middle of June and the sun all day had kept right on shining with sweet mightiness. "Stay jovial, please, Artie! Just promise me that. Please stay your old jovial self!" Flossie MacDonald had wiped her napkin across her weeping eyes and told this to Artie Dam the last time she had seen him, which had been on this spectacular evening in June. And he assured her that he would.

They had gone to Spud's Bar and Grille, the place near Artie's house that was right there on the water on the coast of Massachusetts; the bay, seen through the windows, was calm, and many boats sat there quietly, sailboats and fishing boats and boats large enough to sleep eight people. The sun, which was not yet fully headed down, shone against the water with a golden brilliance, and when Artie looked at Flossie her large black-rimmed glasses had sun reflecting off them.

He and Flossie had come here every other Tuesday night since Flossie's husband died last year; her husband had been a retired math professor, and—to Artie's way of thinking—a regal-looking, thin, hypercritical man. "He was such an asshole," Flossie would say each time she and Artie were together, wiping her eyes, mascara dripping down her cheeks. "And I miss him so much!" But this was their last time in the place; Flossie was moving to Ohio to be near her daughter, Sophie. "Oh Artie," Flossie had said, wrapping her arms around him outside by the door as they said goodbye, "I love you." And he had told her the same.

As they left the place together, Artie saw the masts of sailboats in the bay, standing tall, motionless. He did not remember ever seeing the water so calm. "Amazing," he had said to Flossie, and she had said, "What's amazing is you."

Artie's wife, Evie, had never cared for Flossie, saying that she was "too much." And Artie understood, but he loved Flossie for it; he loved her overly made-up face, her too-yellow hair piled on top of her head, the scent of perfume that followed her everywhere, the delicate way she would sit her large body down after waving to him enthusiastically when she came through the heavy wooden door at Spud's. He loved her, but he was not remotely in love with her.

It was that he could be himself with her; he realized this only later.

"How was poor old Flossie?" Evie had asked Artie that night; she was sitting in the living room with a newspaper on her lap, and she looked up at him as he walked into the room. Evie was one of the few people Artie knew who still read a real newspaper.

"She misses Reginald," Artie said, sitting down in a chair across from her. "She says it every time. Understandable, I guess. They were married forty-two years." He added, "The water's beautiful tonight. Flat, flat, flat."

Evie said nothing. She folded the paper and put it on the coffee table in front of her.

"But she did say—she says it every time—that he was an asshole." Artie chuckled, sticking his legs out in front of him.

Still, Evie made no comment.

"Well, he was lucky to go fast, only two months." Artie said this looking around the room. Through the windows he could see the light on the end of the small wharf down past their lawn. The room they sat in had a high ceiling with rafters far up; theirs was a spacious house, with a newly renovated kitchen that also looked out over the water. In the living room was the grand piano that had been there for years (and which Artie, with no piano lessons to his name, would sit and compose little pieces on). There were different upholstered chairs, and a few small tables on which sat various framed photographs beside many small—tiny—boxes that had been in Evie's family.

Artie, even having been here for almost thirty years, still could not believe that this was the house he lived in. The house was on a private road right there on the ocean, with two other houses that shared the road, and although Artie had said many times that he did not like the sign declaring it private, he had lost that battle years earlier. The house had belonged to his in-laws, and Evie had inherited it long ago when her parents moved to Florida. Both had since died, more than ten years ago now, and Evie's one sister lived in Colorado, where she had gone, years before, to college.

Excerpted from The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout. Copyright © 2026 by Elizabeth Strout. Excerpted by permission of Random House. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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