This Must Be The Place is my third book by Maggie O’Farrell and the first that I found somewhat wearisome.
It is a rather long story, albeit compelling, that is not told chronologically and spans a time period from 1944 to 2016. The chapters are written from the perspective of a large cast of characters at various time points in the past or present. The story also takes place in different places: Donegal (Ireland), Belfast, London, Sussex, Cumbria, Suffolk, Scotland, Brooklyn, St. Francisco, California, New York, Goa (India), Chengdu (China), and Bolivia. If I were less stressed at work or bone tired, I might have responded better. However, zigzagging through time and space to track the main protagonists, children and relatives on both sides of their family, friends, and acquaintances left me dizzy and grouchy. I felt I was put to work to stitch the story together. It did not help that I was not enamored of the couple (Daniel and Claudette) whose marriage teeters precariously on the brink of dissolution.
To her credit, O’Farrell makes us curious about her characters whose individual personalities are superbly drawn. Claudette Wells is a famous and Oscar-winning actress who disappeared from the movie world at the height of her career to retreat with her son (Ari) to a large mansion in a remote valley in Donegal, Ireland. Entry to and exit from this secret hideout of a house necessitates the unlocking of twelve gates. In some ways, figuring out what happened is akin to painstakingly unlocking the secret lives of the characters. Even after I finished this story, I can only guess at what led to Claudette’s failed relationship with Timou Lindstrom, the almost-husband and film director who propelled her to stardom. What is consistent is Claudette’s volatile character, her rather harsh and unforgiving nature, intelligence, dedication to her children, and decisiveness.
The other protagonist is Daniel Sullivan, an American linguist, who stumbled upon Claudette on a trip to Ireland on a mission to locate his grandfather’s ashes. At the time he met Claudette in Donegal, he was nursing grief and anger at not being allowed by his ex-wife to see his two children (Niall and Phoebe). Daniel and Claudette marry and have two children (Marithe and Calvin). How complicated can life be when two people dearly love each other, live in private seclusion, and have adorable children they both love and care about?
That all is not well started to emerge when Daniel had to make a trip back to New York to celebrate his elderly father’s birthday. Daniel’s past as a graduate student, his cavalier attitude toward his girlfriends (especially his first, Nicola Janks), his addiction to alcohol and drugs come back to unravel his life in the present. I wanted to know what happened to Nicola in 1986 in a forest in Scotland after a wedding at which Daniel was trying to mend a broken relationship with her. Daniel wondered too and lived with an uneasiness that could not be put aside until he knew the truth.
A question this story raised is how much of our past (history) we should reveal to our spouse and at what cost. The story takes a hard look at the fragility of marriage and how easily love can fray at the seams and fall apart. A total stranger (Rosalind, a new character introduced at 90% of the book, which initially had me quite riled) offered Daniel some food for thought: ”Marriages end not because of something you did say but because of something you didn’t. All you have to do now is to work out what it is.” Can a marriage be salvaged when trust is betrayed? How will it happen, if at all?
The Daniel-Claudette story aside, O’Farrell let us get to know Ari, Niall, Phoebe, Marithe and Calvin quite intimately. This brood of children are real persons with their own struggles and I feel like I have met and known them. They are a lot more likeable than Daniel or Claudette.
I cannot give this book less than four stars as O’Farrell is indisputably a very competent raconteur. The plot, the dialogue, and characterization are expertly handled. Maggie O'Farrell fans will likely love it. I suspect I would too if I had read this at some beautiful vacation spot in a more relaxed frame of mind.