Maggie O’Farrell, Evie Wyld and Anakana Schofield: This week’s best new fiction 

From Maggie O’Farrell’s radiant novel to The Bass Rock by Evie Wyld and Anakana Schofield’s captivating latest, this week’s best new fiction

Hamnet

Maggie O’Farrell                                                                               Tinder Press, £20

This radiant, immersive novel is anchored in its author’s fascination with Hamlet. It begins one summer’s day in 1596, when 11-year-old Judith comes down with a fever in Stratford-upon-Avon. 

Her twin brother, Hamnet, searches desperately for help while his mother is tending her herb plot a mile away and his playwright father is off in London. Driving a narrative that shimmers with intimate insight is the forewarning that one of Shakespeare’s twins will not live beyond the week. 

It’s a potent tale of marriage, creativity and grief, illuminating what until now has been a theatrical footnote.

Hephzibah Anderson

 

The Bass Rock

Evie Wyld                                                                                  Jonathan Cape, £16.99

Wyld’s chronicle of women ill-used by men weaves between three eras. Sarah is a girl in medieval times accused of being a witch; Ruth is a young wife in the Forties, faced with her husband’s infidelity; Viviane is a messed-up modern-day singleton who is befriended by a prostitute. 

What links them is a place – a house on the North Berwick coast where things go bump in the night – and the fact that almost every man they meet is given to violence. 

Wyld’s writing is always lively, but if ever a book laid its message on with a trowel, this is it.

Anthony Gardner

 

Bina

Anakana Schofield                                                                                    Fleet, £14.99

Bina, a 74-year-old Irishwoman, scribbles down a series of ‘warnings’ – a mix of eccentric cautionary tales and colourful memories – on scraps of envelopes, making for an ambiguous, fragmented first-person narrative. 

Even so, it’s possible to make out a skeletal premise: Bina has been imprisoned after a long career of administering lethal injections to the sick. Schofield requires readers to do a fair amount of work to determine what’s going on, but this is nevertheless a captivating look at female friendship and how women’s voices go unheard.

Gwendolyn Smith