Title: Hamnet
Author: Maggie O’Farrell
Genre: Historical Fiction/ Fiction
Published: 2020
Description: Warwickshire in the 1580s. Agnes, a woman as feared
as she is sought after for her unusual gifts. She settles with her husband in
henley street, Stratford, and has three children: a daughter Susanna, and then
twins Hamnet and Judith. Hamnet dies in 1596, aged elven. Four years or so late, the husband writes a play called
Hamlet.
Review: With “Hamnet”, Maggie O’Farrell delivers an absolute beauty of a book
that approaches history not as a dusty archive, but as a living, breathing, and
painfully relatable human drama. Although the name Shakespeare is never
mentioned, his shadow hands over every page, even though he not the protagonist
here. The honor belongs to Agnes.
What immediately stands out is O’Farrell’s unparalleled writing style. She
employs an almost compelling present tense that places the reader right in the
heart of late 16th-century Stratford-upon-Avon. Her prose is lyrical
and vivid.
At the heart of the novel is the death of eleven-year-old Hamnet and the
devastating impact it has on his family. O’Farrell describes the grieving
process with a precision that is almost physically painful. The way Agnes tries
to make sense of the world as her child slips away from her is heartbreaking.
The author ingeniously connects this personal loss to the eventual creation of
the world-famous play “Hamlet’, several years later. The book transforms the
tragedy from a footnote in history into the beating heart of a literary genius.
The characterization of Agnes is the book’s greatest strength. She is
portrayed as a mysterious, strong woman with a deep connection to nature, in
contrast to her husband, who flees to London to live in words. Their marriage,
marked by distance and deep affection, feel surprisingly modern and believable.
“Hamnet” is an ode to the forgotten women in history and a universal
story of love and loss. It is a rare kind of book that both intellectually
stimulated and emotionally unravels you completely. Even for me, who is not a
mother and never will be one, the book was very emotional. For fans of historical
fiction with a deep psychological layer.
Rating: 5/ 5
Author: Maggie O’Farrell





