Hamnet
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Maggie
This is a book I’ve wanted to write for a very long time. I first heard about the existence of Hamnet, the boy, when I was studying the play ‘Hamlet’ at school for my Higher English exam. My teacher mentioned in passing that Shakespeare had a son called Hamnet who died several years before the play was written. I was immediately struck by the echo of these names. What did it mean for a father to call a play after his dead son?
Carol and 641 other people liked this
Marilyn Sneddon
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Marilyn Sneddon
I loved this book too. I didn't know about Hamnet, the boy, before reading this book, but it was beautiful crafted. I can definitely relate to a father or mother naming a play after their dead child. …
Bob Zaslow
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Bob Zaslow
Ms. O'Farrell- 'Hamnet' is up on the list of my ten favorite novels ever! Your writing is so wonderfully crafted, your structure, flawless and your dialogue, so engaging that it was easy to suspend di…
Roberta
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Roberta
There's also the notion that an Ur-Hamlet was written shortly after Hamnet died, and then a long gap between then and the premiere at the Globe; if memory serves, it was twelve years (1598-1610)--the …
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He has a tendency to slip the bounds of the real, tangible world around him and enter another place.
Maggie
These lines came from observations of my children daydreaming. I’m always fascinated to witness this evidence of their inner likes, the workings of their imagination; I love to see them drift away from the quotidian world around them to a place all of their own. It’s such a crucial part of childhood – that other, parallel world. Adulthood, too, actually. We all need time for our brains to switch off, to go into a low gear.
Hayley and 308 other people liked this
Dana Monroe
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Dana Monroe
Is this how he is able to die in place of his sister? I'd love your insight into how that was possible
Meredith
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Meredith
This statement is profound, so much more so since I became a mother. Watching Baby figuring out his surroundings, now trying to crawl and speak, his eyes incredibly focused...it's incredible. This tin…
Samantha Dawkims
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Samantha Dawkims
Wow
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Every life has its kernel, its hub, its epicentre, from which everything flows out, to which everything returns.
Maggie
I think we all have moments in our pasts which constantly return to us – a decision or conversation or split-second upon which so much hinges. Perhaps we have several. I was just imagining that Agnes would never be able to forget the fact that Hamnet and Judith were left alone at this point in their story. It would never rest easily with her.
Angie
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Angie
I imagined the guilt would be horrible.
LindaDSW
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LindaDSW
I kept on willing her to get back to the house.
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This moment is the absent mother’s: the boy, the empty house, the deserted yard, the unheard cry. Him standing here, at the back of the house, calling for the people who had fed him, swaddled him, rocked him to sleep, held his hand as he took his first steps, taught him to use a spoon, to blow on broth before he ate it, to take care crossing the street, to let sleeping dogs lie, to swill out a cup before drinking, to stay away from deep water. It will lie at her very core, for the rest of her life.
Maggie
Hamnet grew up in a multi-generational household, with his mother, his paternal grandparents, an aunt and uncles who were not much older than him. Mary Shakespeare, William’s mother, gave birth to no fewer than eight children, four boys and four girls. Two of the girls died in infancy and another at the age of eight. William was her oldest surviving child; at the time he got married, his youngest brother, Edmund, was a toddler. So the Shakespeare children – Hamnet, his twin Judith, and his older sister, Susanna – would have been surrounded by an aunt and uncles, many of whom would have assumed a blurred parental/sibling role towards them.
Jim Freeman
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Jim Freeman
Hamnet grew up in a multi generational home which I think was much more common in countries other than the US. I believe that it was also more common here in the past and in poorer areas where rent co…
Sue
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Sue
It often takes a village of family to parent children. I missed that from my own childhood, as this book clearly taught me.
Nishita
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Nishita
I grew up in a multi-generational family (more like a joint family with grandmom, uncles, aunts etc. all living in one house). I could so relate to these parts of the story.
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Later, and for the rest of her life, she will think that if she had left there and then, if she had gathered her bags, her plants, her honey, and taken the path home, if she had heeded her abrupt, nameless unease, she might have changed what happened next. If she had left her swarming bees to their own devices, their own ends, instead of working to coax them back into their hives, she might have headed off what was coming.
Maggie
How much would Agnes regret not returning home? How much would she regret and castigate herself for this? It’s almost unbearable to contemplate.
Rita and 162 other people liked this
Agnes Jackson
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Agnes Jackson
Bereaved parents live with “what ifs “ and “what might have been” for the rest of their lives. It is just a fact but beautifully expressed here.
Marilyn Sneddon
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Marilyn Sneddon
And bereaved parents also live with the regret of the times they didn't spend just listening to their children; of always being in a hurry; of thinking we know what their needs are and on and on. We n…
Robin
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Robin
I finished this book months ago but this passage still haunts me. I don’t think there could be anything worse than losing a child.
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She grows up feeling wrong, out of place, too dark, too tall, too unruly, too opinionated, too silent, too strange. She grows up with the awareness that she is merely tolerated, an irritant, useless, that she does not deserve love, that she will need to change herself substantially, crush herself down if she is to be married. She grows up, too, with the memory of what it meant to be properly loved, for what you are, not what you ought to be.
Maggie
Some scholars believe that Joan Hathaway was Agnes’ real mother; others claim she was the stepmother. There is little concrete evidence to support or discredit either theory, only a hiatus in the otherwise regular birth-dates of the Hathaway children. Either way, as the eldest daughter of the farm, Agnes would have been expected to care for the younger children, to keep the house clean, to cook for the family and the shepherds. This passage is, for me, about the effect of the lack of love while growing-up, and how this can be absorbed and internalised by a child. I really enjoyed creating the character of Hamnet’s mother. We are so accustomed to calling her ‘Anne Hathaway’ but her father’s will clearly names her as ‘Agnes’. That was an electrifying, defining moment in the writing of the book. In giving her what is presumably her birth name, I’m asking readers to discard what we think we know about her and see her anew. If you ask someone what they know about Shakespeare’s wife, you’ll probably receive one of two answers. Either: he hated her. Or: she tricked him into marriage. Historians and biographers and critics have for a long time inexplicably vilified and criticized her, creating a very misogynistic version of her. I wanted to persuade people to think again, to not rush to conclusions. And their evidence? Hathaway sceptics all fall back on the same overhandled facts: that Shakespeare only left her his ‘second-best bed’ in his will, that he was eighteen to her twenty-six when they married, that their first child was born only six months after the wedding. When I began my novel about Hamnet and his link to the play ‘Hamlet’, I envisaged it as a book about fathers and sons. I was unprepared for the Hathaway vitriol in much of what I was reading. Why, I kept wondering as I worked my way through histories and biographies, are we instructed to hate her? Is it a case of simple misogyny or is there something more complex at work here? Why do we desire the Bard to be unhappily married?
Clover and 253 other people liked this
deleted user
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deleted user
Amongst much that I loved in Hamnet, I so loved the strong and distinctive character of Agnes.
Jim Freeman
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Jim Freeman
Never wished his to be an unhappy marriage nor even thought it was. His major female characters didn't suggest to me that his relationship with his wife was all that difficult since they varied widely…
Roberta
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Roberta
I thought that it was common practice for the widow to be left the second-best bed in wills of that era, so that a surviving child could have the best bed for wishes of fertility--?
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The husband, standing straight as a reed now, arms folded, lips pressed together, shakes his head. “What did she say?” “That you had more hidden away inside you than anyone else she’d ever met.”
Maggie
I wanted to give readers a new perspective on Shakespeare’s marriage, to suggest that William and Agnes loved each other, that theirs was a partnership. This idea expressed in this excerpt is drawn from my conjecture about how Shakespeare might have been seen in rural Warwickshire when he was young. I think he must have stuck out a mile. We know now what was inside him, what his imagination and intellect were capable of, but people then might have considered him a bit odd, a bit of a misfit. I liked the idea that maybe Agnes was the only person who saw his potential or recognized his extraordinary abilities.
Catherine Seldon
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Catherine Seldon
It is beautiful and shows how different Agnes was as well, so much more insightful than most of her day and position in the world.
Taz
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Taz
I thought the characterization of William himself was fascinating! I've always -- understandably -- seen him as this arrogant genius, but it was so interesting to see Agnes' brother's reaction to him …
Anna Noack
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Anna Noack
This was a gem of a line in this book and defined an understanding between them.
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The trick is never to let down your guard. Never think you are safe. Never take for granted that your children’s hearts beat, that they sup milk, that they draw breath, that they walk and speak and smile and argue and play. Never for a moment forget they may be gone, snatched from you, in the blink of an eye, borne away from you like thistledown.
Maggie
Losing a child is every parents’ most visceral fear. I came across, again and again, in various biographies of Shakespeare, a lofty and dismissive attitude to Hamnet’s death. He got perhaps two or three entries in the index, and his death was usually wrapped up in statistics about child mortality in the 16th century, as if the implication was that his death was of no particular significance, that it was run-of-the-mill. It made me furious every time I read this! I just refuse to believe that at any point in history, any where in the world, the loss of a child is anything less than catastrophic for the family concerned. With this passage, we are inside the head of a woman who has birthed eight children and buried three of them. She, I don’t think, would have found any of their deaths run-of-the-mill. She would have been branded by the sense of their fragility.
Susan Hayworth
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Susan Hayworth
Like Sarah and Kim, I too have lost a child. The loss in the the book is addressed in a real and compassionate way. This, and my love of Shakespeare will see me return to this book.
Roberta
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Roberta
Even during the great waves of plague, when parents sometimes deserted their own children (sorry, don't remember where I read that), they must have done so in misery and torment. That said, I just don…
Ann James
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Ann James
One of my favourite scenes in the movie 'A Little Chaos' is where the character of the low born gardener is thrust, terrified, into the French court & finds a common bond with the Queen & other women …
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Susanna, shortly before her second birthday, sits in a basket on the floor of her grandmother’s parlour, her legs crossed, her skirts billowing up around her, filled with air. She holds a wooden spoon in each hand and with these she paddles as fast as she can. She is sculling down the river. The current is fast and weaving. Weeds waft and unravel. She has to paddle and paddle to stay afloat—if she stops, who knows what may happen?
Maggie
This passage and one following it are some of the first pages I ever wrote of the novel. They are interlinked, describing the same incident, as seen from Susanna’s point of view, and then Mary’s. I had written thirty or so pages of ‘Hamnet’ in 2015 or so, then swerved away from the project to work on something else. When I decided to give the book another go, in 2017, I read over those pages and ditched the lot, except for these. So I have a strange fondness for them as they feel like the book’s archeology to me, its bedrock. I loved writing about a complex adult situation from an uncomprehending child’s viewpoint: it gives it an extra potency, I believe.
Ann
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Ann
I love your writing from the children's perspective. The only way to do that is to connect to the child within, which is what it allows your readers to do. Brilliantly done. So glad you kept these par…
Deborah
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Deborah
Susannah obviously has inherited her father's imagination--and her mother's awareness that disaster is always looming around the next bend. Wonderful connections made in this image.
Mark Cofta
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Mark Cofta
I used to play a lot by imagining being somewhere else and doing something wonderful. This passage reminded me of that.
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Anyone, Eliza is thinking, who describes dying as “slipping away” or “peaceful” has never witnessed it happen. Death is violent, death is a struggle. The body clings to life, as ivy to a wall, and will not easily let go, will not surrender its grip without a fight.
Maggie
It was painful to write these words, even harder to construct the death scene. I found I couldn’t write these pages in the house, where my own children live. It felt too dangerous, as if I was inviting some terrible hex upon us. So I wrote them outside, in a dilapidated potting shed, with my laptop on my knee. I worked in fifteen-minute bursts, and then had to take a walk around the garden for a while, before I was ready to go on.
Kerrie O'Neill
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Kerrie O'Neill
I appreciate this so much a powerfully honest description of death.
Janice Cawley
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Janice Cawley
The description of Agnes preparing her son for burial left me sobbing. I had to set the book aside and go and stare at my own children.
Melanie
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Melanie
You created a scene that’s so powerful it left all of us touched by it. I’m not surprised it was hard to write. This is the best book I have read in an age, or maybe ever.
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She, like all mothers, constantly casts out her thoughts, like fishing lines, towards her children, reminding herself of where they are, what they are doing, how they fare.
Maggie
I do this all the time, whenever my children aren’t directly under my eye. It’s a constant tabulation, not just on their whereabouts, but how they are in themselves, what they might be up to. It gets more abstract as they become teenagers, when you just have to hope they are where they said they would be, doing what they told you they were doing…
May and 169 other people liked this
Cindy Haiken
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Cindy Haiken
This particular portion of the novel was such a compelling evocation of maternal grief. I honestly don't know that I've ever read a more perfectly and accurately rendered capturing of this.
Kim Davis
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Kim Davis
This passage did me in. I listened to it as an audiobook; Ell Potter's narration of this made me cry. Agnes casting out lines and coming up empty, "And Hamnet? And Hamnet?" It hurt to witness her desp…
Anna Noack
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Anna Noack
This is such a truth.
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How were they to know that Hamnet was the pin holding them together? That without him they would all fragment and fall apart, like a cup shattered on the floor?
Maggie
I was trying, here, to imagine how a family feels when one of its members passes away, how the construction of the unit must feel so different, how it would need to adapt and heal.
Ally
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Ally
My mom died when I was young. It definitely causes a family to splinter apart for awhile. Fortunately, we found each other again, with time.
Laura
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Laura
This line meant a lot to me. I finished your book tonight. It’s just amazing. X
Mary C
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Mary C
Yes - it completely reshapes the family, and in most unexpected ways.
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Acknowledgements
Maggie
The novels which helped me find a path through the writing of ‘Hamnet’ were ‘The Sisters Brother’ by Patrick deWitt and ‘The Wide Sargasso Sea’ by Jean Rhys. The former because it is a work a genius - historical fiction which wears its history so lightly and deftly. The latter because it lights up the dark and unseen places in a story we think we already know. Thank you so much for reading. I hope you enjoy the book, the paperback edition is out on 5/18: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/57426099-hamnet
Kayla and 227 other people liked this
Gail Battaglia
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Gail Battaglia
This book is so beautifully written that I treasured every word! I recommend it to everyone.
Katie Arabis
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Katie Arabis
Maggie, this book is one of the most beautiful I've ever read, and I typically shy away from books which involve "children in peril".. too upsetting, but I am glad I read this one. It's a masterpiece.…
Divyanshi
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Divyanshi
Another book with a heart wrenching depiction of the relationship between a pair of twins is Arundhati Roy’s The God Of Small Things. I’m low key very curious to know what Maggie might think of that b…