Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine

Gail Honeyman

Meet Eleanor Oliphant: she struggles with appropriate social skills and tends to say exactly what she's thinking. That, combined with her unusual appearance (scarred cheek, tendency to wear the same clothes year in, year out), means that Eleanor has become a creature of habit (to say the least) and a bit of a loner. Nothing is missing in her carefully timetabled life of avoiding social interactions, where weekends are punctuated by frozen pizza, vodka, and phone chats with Mummy. But everything changes when Eleanor meets Raymond, the bumbling and deeply unhygienic IT guy from her office. When she and Raymond together save Sammy, an older gentleman who has fallen on the sidewalk, the three become the kind of friends who rescue each other from the lives of isolation they have each been living. And it is Raymond's big heart that will ultimately help Eleanor find the way to repair her own profoundly damaged one.


Adult Book Club Kits

  • A Gentleman in Moscow


  • Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine


  • Caste : the Origins of Our Discontents


  • Making It All Right: a Novel


  • Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants


  • Crying in H Mart: A Memoir


  • Bento Box in the Heartland


  • Small Marvels: Stories


  • The Night Tiger


  • Another Brooklyn


  • The Thursday Murder Club


  • The Night Watchman


  • Faithful


  • Stories of Elders


  • Red at the Bone


  • Where the Crawdads Sing


  • Before We Were Yours


  • Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption


  • Little Fires Everywhere


  • Transcendent Kingdom


  • Educated


  • Dead Letters from Paradise


  • How to Be Nice to Yourself


  • The Neighbor's Secret


  • The Underground Railroad


  • Demon Copperhead


  • The Ku Klux Klan in the Heartland


  • Red, White & Royal Blue


  • The Paris Library


  • Useful Delusions: The Power and Pardox of the Self-Deceiving Brain


  • Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twinty-First Century


  • Voracious