logo
SuperSummary Logo
Plot Summary

Etta and Otto and Russell and James

Emma Hooper
Guide cover placeholder

Etta and Otto and Russell and James

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2015

Plot Summary

Etta and Otto and Russell and James is a novel by Emma Hooper, published in 2015. Hooper’s debut novel, the story is told via complex imagery and poetic language, using magical realist techniques to evoke the inner landscape of people reared in a hardscrabble time trying to make sense of their existence.

The novel begins with a man named Otto reading a letter from a woman named Etta, informing him that she has gone to walk to the water, which she has never seen. She says she hopes to remember to come back. Along with the letter are a stack of recipe cards, which Otto knows are so he will be able to feed himself while she is gone. He briefly considers going after her, but instead calculates how far she will have to walk to see the water: More than 3,000 kilometers.

Otto recalls growing up with fourteen brothers and sisters as a child, while Etta only had a single sibling, a sister named Alma. Otto’s mother was regarded as something magical because all of her children survived during the Great Depression, when child mortality was very high. Etta walks through neighboring farms and meets a man named Russell and exchanges pleasantries with him, then catalogs all of the things she has brought with her for her journey. Otto recalls his family adopting a young boy named Russell, who has no parents and is unwanted by his own family. Russell recalls being brought out into the country as a child and meeting his aunt and uncle, who wanted children but had been unable to have any of their own.



Etta keeps walking, and soon her feet begin to bleed and blister. She falls asleep in a field and has disturbing dreams. When she wakes up, a coyote is licking the blood on her feet. The coyote follows her as she heads into town to purchase better shoes, and continues to follow her. She decides to name him James, and asks if he will be with her for the whole walk. James says he isn’t certain. James helps her navigate, and she tells James about her life and her purpose in walking to the ocean.

Back at the farm, Otto is starving, and begins making the recipes she left behind. His first few attempts to make cinnamon rolls fail, but he eventually makes some that are at least edible.

In the past, Otto remembers how he and Russell went to school, where Etta was a teacher despite not being much older than them. Russell breaks his leg and it does not heal well. When World War II breaks out, Otto joins the army and ships out, but Russell cannot because of his leg, and so stays behind. Otto sends Etta a photo of himself in uniform, and she sends him a photo back. Otto’s hair turns white from the stress of his service. Etta and Russell enter into a love affair while Otto is overseas.



Otto sees Etta’s photo in the newspaper, accompanied by a story on her journey. He buys all the copies of the paper he can find. Otto comes across a guinea pig and adopts it, naming it Oats. Oats says nothing as he cooks. Otto begins making papier-mâché animals to pass the time. Eventually these animal figures fill the house and he begins placing them outside, where they attract a great deal of attention from his neighbors and other passersby.

Etta keeps walking, and has run out of food. Hungry, she begins to worry that she will starve before seeing the ocean, but with James’ help she comes into a town and asks about a grocery store. She is recognized from the newspaper and poses for photos with people; one person gives Etta a small origami crane to take with her.

When Otto returns from the war, he and Etta married and moved into the small teacher’s cottage. Otto is damaged from his experiences in the war and takes out his anger and fear on Etta, making their relationship somewhat strained.



Russell catches up with Etta, having followed when he saw what she was doing. He tells her he has always loved her, and if she is leaving Otto he wants to be with her. She tells him to go back and pursue his own quest; this one is hers. James leaves, and Etta meets a woman named Bryony and they begin walking together, but Etta is beginning to suffer under the strain of her journey. One night Bryony wakes up to find Etta suffering from a fever and extreme pain; Etta tells Bryony that she has fourteen brothers and sisters. Bryony gets Etta to a medical facility and checks her in. Etta believes she is Otto and answers all questions as if she was him.

The ending is ambiguous as Otto’s memories and personality seem to bleed into Etta’s life, but no firm account of the final events is offered.

Continue your reading experience

Subscribe to access our Study Guide library, which offers chapter-by-chapter summaries and comprehensive analysis on 8,000+ literary works ranging from novels to nonfiction to poetry.