Bookclub meeting pack for Hamnet
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Hamnet (Maggie O’Farrell) — Book Club Discussion Guide

Quick refresher (spoiler-light)

Content notes

Child illness/death, plague/epidemic themes, grief, pregnancy/childbirth references.

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Bookclub meeting pack for Hamnet

Free Hamnet Book Club Meeting Pack

Hosting a book club discussion for Hamnet?

Download this free printable meeting pack to make your discussion
easy, fun and organised.

✔ Printable discussion questions
✔ Character exploration prompts
✔ Meeting notes page
✔ Perfect for book clubs

Instant download • Free for book lovers


Big themes to chat about

  • Grief as a force: how loss changes relationships, memory, and identity
  • Mothers, fathers, and different kinds of love: practical love vs performative love vs distant love
  • Art and alchemy: turning lived pain into story, myth, and meaning
  • The seen/unseen: intuition, folklore, “knowing,” and what a community chooses not to say aloud
  • Names and power: anonymity, legacy, and who gets remembered

hamnet— maggie o

Discussion questions (main set)

  1. Agnes as a protagonist: What did you make of her—especially the way the book frames her intuition and connection to nature? Did it feel grounded, mystical, or both?
  2. Structure and time: The novel slips between moments and perspectives. Did that deepen your emotional connection, or keep you at a distance?
  3. Marriage and separation: How did you read the relationship between Agnes and her husband—tender, tense, unequal, pragmatic? Where did you see love, and where did you see misunderstanding?
  4. Community and contagion: What does the book suggest about how “ordinary” life carries invisible threads (trade, travel, gossip, germs) that shape outcomes?
  5. The twins and identity: How does the novel explore sibling bonds and the idea of being “interchangeable” or “irreplaceable”?
  6. Silence and speech: Who is allowed to speak openly about pain in this story—and who isn’t? How do characters communicate when they can’t say the thing directly?
  7. Place as character: Which settings stuck with you (the home, the fields, the town, London)? How does location influence the mood and the choices people make?
  8. Power dynamics: Where do you notice class, money, and gender shaping what options are available—especially in moments of crisis?
  9. Faith, folklore, and medicine: The book holds multiple belief-systems side by side. Did you feel it judged any of them, or simply observed?
  10. Art from sorrow (spoiler-aware): How did you feel about the novel’s portrayal of transforming grief into a work that outlives the person? Comforting, troubling, inevitable?
  11. What “healing” looks like: By the end, what changes feel possible for Agnes? What doesn’t change at all?
  12. Your standout moment: Which scene or image won’t leave you—and why do you think it lodged in your mind?

Optional “deeper dive” prompts

  • If the story were told entirely from one viewpoint (Agnes / husband / child), what would be gained or lost?
  • Did the book feel like historical fiction, literary fiction, or something closer to myth? How does that label change your expectations?

Host-ready meeting plan (45–75 mins)

  • 5 mins: One-word check-in (“haunting,” “tender,” “heavy,” “gorgeous,” etc.)
  • 10 mins: Favourite line/image (paraphrase is fine) and why it hit
  • 30–45 mins: Questions 1–6
  • 10–15 mins: Questions 10–12 (more spoiler-heavy)
  • 2 mins: Next read pick: “another grief-and-art novel” vs “something lighter”

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