Fiction
2016
Finished on October 1, 2025
Rating: 2/5 (OK)
Publisher's Blurb:
Daniel Sullivan leads a complicated life. A New Yorker living in the wilds of Ireland, he has children he never sees in California, a father he loathes in Brooklyn, and his wife, Claudette, is a reclusive ex-film star given to pulling a gun on anyone who ventures up their driveway. Together, they have made an idyllic life in the country, but a secret from Daniel's past threatens to destroy their meticulously constructed and fiercely protected home. Shot through with humor and wisdom, This Must Be the Place is an irresistible love story that crisscrosses continents and time zones as it captures an extraordinary marriage, and an unforgettable family, with wit and deep affection.
In a crazy effort to read all of Maggie O'Farrell's books, I stuck with this one in spite of my irritation with the structure of the novel. Anyone who has read O'Farrell's works is familiar with both her nonlinear timelines and multiple points of view. I have enjoyed a few of her books with these formats, but This Must Be the Place pushed me to my limit. Allow me to share the following line-up for each chapter:
Daniel 2010
Claudette 1989
Niall 1999
Phoebe 2010
Auction Catalog 2005
Donegal 2010
Claudette 1993
Daniel 2010
Lenny 1994
Donegal 2010
Todd 1986
Lucas 1995
Daniel 2010
Claudette 1996
Teresa 1944
Daniel 2010
Maeve 2003
Ari 2010
Daniel 1986
Daniel 2010
Nicola & Daniel 1986
Niall 2013
Claudette & Daniel 2013
Interview with Timou 2014
Lucas 2014
Rosalind 2015
Ari, Calvin & Marithe 2016
Daniel 2016
There you have it. If my calculations are correct there are 16 points of view. As it's Daniel's story, he is the primary narrator, but the complex puzzle of a story made my head hurt. (I didn't even try to keep track of the locations!)
This is not the sort of book you can set down for more than a day without losing your place in the narrative. The prose is lovely, and the conclusion was satisfying, but this is not a book that I can recommend. I can't imagine what it would be like to listen to the audiobook. The novel really needs more than two readers (and the male's delivery is bland and annoying), and the constant shift between characters, time, and place would be agonizing. Thankfully, I had the print edition, which I promptly threw across the room once I finished. Bah!
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