And we forget because we must. Matthew Arnold
The Hand That First Held Mine by Maggie O’Farrell was the winner of the former Costa Novel Award in 2010.
I read and really enjoyed O’Farrell’s memoir I Am, I Am, I Am – Seventeen Brushes With Death, the first of her books I encountered and Hamnet, which won the Women’s Prize for Fiction (2020).
I have The Marriage Portrait still to read, however I was curious to discover more of her earlier work and decided to read this one next.
Dual Narrative, Dual Timeline
This novel is narrated as two stories of two couples, one set in 1950’s/60’s that centres around Lexie, a rebellious university graduate who has been asked to apologise for using a door for men, before receiving her degree.
At home in Devon with her parents, she is about to abandon them all, the academic institution and her family for London, after Innes, a 34 yr old sports car driving art dealer, journalist, critic and self-confessed hedonist, breaks down not far from the field where she is sulking.
Innes has been in St Ives, visiting the studio of an artist whose work he’d been hoping to buy. He had found the artist rather drunk and the work far from completion. The whole excursion had been a raging disaster. And now this.
Lexie will move to London, creating an unconventional life and career in 1950’s Soho guided by her pleasure seeking lover, but with the spiteful eye of one who wishes her harm. Inne’s past will come to haunt Lexie’s future, and she will throw herself into her career, doing what she can to maintain her independence.
His father, he tells her, was English, but his mother was a mestizo from colonial Chile. Half Chilean, half Scottish, he explains, hence his Hibernian Christian name and also his black hair.
There’s much more to Lexie’s story, but to share any more of it would spoil the discovery for new readers of this compelling mystery. It is one of those novels where you know the narrative threads are going to connect and so each revelation keeps you guessing, until it eventually becomes clear.
Present Day London, Forgetting

In the present day (2010) Elina, a Finnish woman in London and her boyfriend Ted, have just had a baby boy and she recalls nothing about the birth or the 3 days spent in hospital.
She tests herself, scans her mind. Has she remembered anything? Has it come back to her while she was sleeping? The birth, the birth, the birth, she intones to herself, you must remember, you have to remember. But no. She can recall being pregnant. She can see the baby here, lying in her lap. But how it got there is a mystery.
Not only has their life been turned upside down, but Ted is having memory flashes of childhood, but the images he is seeing are not like what his parents have told him. He knows what happened to Elina, but for now he is not sharing it.
Four days ago, she’d almost died.
The thought has a physical effect on him. One of disorientation and nausea, like seasickness or looking down from a high building. He has to lean his head in his hands and breathe deeply, and he feels the earlier tears crowding into his throat.
Slowly, the two of them begin to piece together the missing elements from their stories. Ted confronts his mother and finds her unhelpful. But since the birth of his son, the flashes of scenes from the past revisit him with increasing frequency.
‘Do you remember…?’ he asks, then has to break off to think. ‘A man came to the house once. And you … you sent him away. I think. I’m sure you did.’
‘When?’
‘Years ago. When I was small. A man in a brown jacket. Sort of untidy hair. I was upstairs. You were arguing with him. You said – I remember this – you said, “No, you can’t come in, you have to leave.” Do you remember that?
When Traumatic Events Awaken the Past
Everyone is being confronted with challenges and O’Farrell deftly carries the reader through them all, and keeps us puzzling over the mysteries underpinning each of their lives.
There is a level of unease and intrigue that is present throughout the narrative, that quickens the pace of readings, as we realise that not all characters are being honest or have good intentions.
Secrets, lies, infidelities, manipulative jealousies, tragedy and the unconditional love of true motherhood. The novel has emotional depth and psychological insight, while keeping up a well thought our plot.
An absolutely riveting read with brilliant storytelling and just enough withholding to allow the slow reveal of mystery and deception.
Highly Recommended.
Further Reading
The Guardian/Observer review: The Hand That First Held Mine by Maggie O’Farrell – Elizabeth Day enjoys a compelling novel of memory and motherhood, 25 Apr 2010
NPR review: A Moving Look At The Bonds Of Motherhood by Jessa Crispin, 27 Apr 2010
Author, Maggie O’Farrell
Maggie O’Farrell is a Northern Irish novelist, now one of Britain’s most acclaimed and popular contemporary fiction authors whose work has been translated into over 30 languages.
Her debut novel After You’d Gone won the Betty Trask Award and The Hand That First Held Mine the Costa Novel Award (2010). She is the author of Hamnet, winner of the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2020, and the memoir I AM, I AM, I AM, both Sunday Times no. 1 bestsellers.
Her novels include After You’d Gone, My Lover’s Lover, The Distance Betwees US, which won a Somerset Maugham Award, The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox, The Hand That First Held Mine, which won the 2010 Costa Novel Award, Instructions for a Heatwave, This Must Be the Place and The Marriage Portrait, shortlisted for the Women’s Prize. She lives in Edinburgh.



It’s such a long time since I read this but I do remember thinking that O’Farrell was queen of the suspenseful dual narrative. Glad you enjoyed it, Claire.
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That has been quite a discovery for me Susan, as Hamnet being historical fiction wasn’t like that for me, but this I found absolutely riveting. I’m looking forward to reading more, whether it’s her latest or more from the backlist. Do you have a favourite of her work?
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I loved her debut, After You’d Gone. Similar structure to this one. I’m not much of an historical fiction fan so haven’t read her more recent ones.
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My favorite of hers is “The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox” which was also the first of her books I read. Well, it was my favorite, until I read “Hamnet”! But I’ve read ALL her books.
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Thank you for sharing that, I’m going to be looking out for all of your favourites!
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Like Susan, it’s a long time since I read thisone, but I remember enjoying it very much, And do read The Marriage Portrait. That’s worth it too.
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Moving that one up the TBR now. 🥰
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👍
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On the strength of this review I have just rushed down to my library in search of books by Maggie O’Farrell. The only one there was I Am I Am I Am which I grabbed after reading your review of it.
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Oh that’s wonderful to hear, though I’m sorry they didn’t have this title. I was a late reader of O’Farrell and the memoir was the first book of hers I read, an unforgettable and unique reading experience it was too.
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I agree, I loved this too and you’ve reminded me to get back to reading her!
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I keep meaning to re-read this, one of my favourite O’Farrells.
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