Submitted by throwawaffleaway t3_yzoywe in books
I’m reading This Must Be the Place by Maggie O’Farrell.
Back in the beginning of 2021 I listened to Hamnet on audio and LOVED it. Of course there were several different perspectives in that book, and I thought it was a great device especially for telling the story of the Black Plague spreading. I don’t recall exactly how many times she switched which character’s POV the audience was reading, but the way it was done made sense and served the narrative arc really well, imo. Perhaps this also worked better because I’m generally familiar with Shakespeare as a layperson.
So it’s not a shock that an earlier work of hers might not be as polished, but in This Must Be the Place, as I’m halfway through, it seems she’s determined to write a chapter from every single character that gets mentioned in passing. I’m having a really hard time finding the thread of the story here, as each POV is also a different point in time and typically a different geographic location as well. It’s not that it’s a complex story, seems like the main couple this story surrounds had some marriages ending with infidelity and there’s kids in their former marriages, plus an ex-gf died (not much of a spoiler, this is mentioned in the first chapter).
My frustration boils down to chicken-or-egg: am I not invested because of the constant whiplash? Or is the story just not that interesting and the radical time/space/character jumps are the only attempt at intrigue?
So far, again I’m precisely halfway through, the chapters have been: husband, wife, husbands first son, husbands first daughter, pointless boring auction catalogue, husband, wife, husband, husbands long lost best friend, husbands second daughter, wife’s ex-husbands assistant, wife’s brother. That’s 9 different characters, and I feel like there’s no justification here for that many.
hannah_nj t1_ix17a0s wrote
Yeah I think that would frustrate me. I’m quite a character-driven reader and like to get to know the characters really well, so jumping around to too many for the sake of the plot takes me out of the story a bit. Sometimes POV changes are great, but if they’re just used as a way to make it easier to explain plot points, you can usually tell