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Authors: Maggie O'Farrell

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At about ten o’clock, Aoife staggers out of the front door and collapses onto the step. She groans, jams on a pair of sunglasses and sticks a cigarette into her mouth.

“What time is it?” she rasps, searching her pockets for a lighter.

In a flash, Monica is out of her seat and snatching the cigarette from her mouth. “Don’t you dare,” she says.

Aoife regards her, her face screwed up. Monica bends down and takes the packet away from her, and the lighter. Aoife groans again, buries her face in her arms.

“What’s up with her?” Gretta hears Michael Francis ask.

Claire shushes him, says, “Never mind.”

“Do you want a slice of bread?” Gretta asks her youngest daughter.

“No.” Aoife raises her head and seems to rethink this reply. “Actually, yes.”

“Good girl.” Gretta gets up, pleased to have a task. She doesn’t like sitting about, no matter what is wrong in life. It does you good to have something ahead of you, regardless how small.

She is in the kitchen, shaving curls off the top of the butter, when she hears Hughie burst out, “Look!”

Gretta lets the knife slide from her hand.

“What?” Michael Francis says.

“Look who’s coming!”

Gretta is out of the door, into the sunlight and down the path. At the gate, she stops. She shades her eyes with her hands. A person is coming off the causeway, just setting foot on the sloping
track of the island. A stooped walk, head bent. As they watch, one hand rises in greeting.

“Is it him?” Monica, who’s always been shortsighted but would never admit it, says.

Gretta swings open the gate, stepping out of the garden. She raises her own hand to wave back.

“It is,” she says.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thank you, Mary-Anne Harrington and Victoria Hobbs.

Thank you, Emily Griffin, Hazel Orme, Georgina Moore, Helena Towers and all at Headline.

Thank you, Jordan Pavlin.

Thank you, Ruthie.

Thank you, Bridget.

Thank you to my mother for, among other things, the loan of the Connemara map, and to my father for meteorological detail; any inaccuracies are, of course, my own …

Thank you, Wendy McMurdo, for filling me in on the life of a photographer’s assistant.

Thank you, Carly Pattinson and Rebecca Tamas, for your patience and imagination.

Thank you, Juno. Thank you, Iris. Thank you, Saul.

And thank you, Will, for, well, everything.

A Note About the Author

Maggie O’Farrell was born in Northern Ireland, grew up in Wales and Scotland, lived in London, and now resides with her family in Edinburgh. Her first novel,
After You’d Gone
(2000), published to international acclaim, won a Betty Trask Award. She is the author of
My Lover’s Lover
(2002),
The Distance Between Us
(2004), which won a Somerset Maugham Award, and
The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox
(2006). She is also the author of
The Hand That First Held Mine
(2010), which won the 2010 Costa Novel Award. Waterstones, the U.K.’s leading book retailer, included O’Farrell among its list of 25 Authors for the Future.

Visit:
www.maggieofarrell.com

Like:
www.facebook.com/MaggieOFarrellBooks

For more information, please visit
www.aaknopf.com

Instructions for a Heatwave

by Maggie O’Farrell

Reader’s Guide

The introduction, author biography, discussion questions, and suggested reading that follow are designed to enhance your group’s discussion of
Instructions for a Heatwave
, the mysterious and riveting new novel by Maggie O’Farrell.

About the Book

It is 1976, an unprecedented heatwave is plaguing England, and the Riordan family is in crisis. Gretta and Robert Riordan—Irish expatriates now living in London—have been together for decades. Like all couples, they adhere—or have succumbed—to a strict daily routine at their home. But one day, Robert leaves the house to buy a newspaper and never comes back. Stunned by his disappearance, his estranged children—Michael Francis, Monica, and Aoife—reconverge at their childhood home in order to unravel the mystery that will lead them back to him. As they try to solve this mystery, they are forced to confront their own personal crises and the secrets they have kept hidden from one another. Michael Francis fears that his marriage is ending. Monica is bothered by her inability to earn the love and approval of the new child in her life and, worse, is haunted by the staggering secret that led to the demise of her first marriage. Aoife, who has been considered the black sheep of the family since her childhood, continues to struggle through daily life with a hidden disability that makes even the smallest daily tasks a tremendous challenge. Their mother, Gretta, meanwhile, has been keeping her own secret, one so earth-shattering that her children—and readers—are left to wonder: How well can we really know others—and ourselves? Together they must face the past and find a way to let go of the secrets that threaten to keep them apart. O’Farrell delves deep, creating a beautiful, honest narrative that evolves into a stunning work of domestic portraiture. She also turns up the heat, building psychological drama that grips us with suspense until the final page. Reaching across generations and continents, the story of the Riordan family enlightens us about the clash of tradition and modernity, showing us the pieces of the past we must hold close and the parts we must let go of in order to be whole. Readers of O’Farrell’s sixth book will be captivated by this story of family, love, and loss—of the ties that bind and the secrets that separate. In her portrait of the Riordans, O’Farrell sheds light on the distance that we place between ourselves and others, and the strain that results when we do not allow ourselves to be fully known and fail to accept that which is other to us. In its stunning revelations,
Instructions for a Heatwave
is a story of truth and, ultimately, acceptance as we come to understand one another by forgiving one another—and ourselves—the mistakes of our past.

Discussion Questions

1. The weather referenced in the novel’s title refers to the setting but also takes on symbolic or metaphorical significance. O’Farrell writes that “strange weather brings out strange behavior … [People] start behaving … not so much out of character but deep within it” (p. 103). What does she mean by this? Where do we see examples of this among the characters? How does the heat enhance or mirror the psychological drama of the story?

2. Consider the various examples of siblings in the story. What are their relationships like? Are there many similarities among their relationships? Are the siblings very alike as characters? What problems or tensions are evident among them, and what causes this?

3. In the opening scenes of the book, O’Farrell creates a sense of the routine and the mundane through a description of Gretta’s and Robert’s daily habits. It creates a sense of domesticity, but how does this sense of the routine also heighten the feeling of alarm over Robert’s disappearance and affect our reaction to the revelations at the story’s end?

4. When we are introduced to Michael Francis, we find him thinking that “[h]e is, for a moment, exactly the person he is meant to be … There is no difference … between the way the world might see him and the person he privately knows himself to be” (p. 13). What does the author mean by this? Where do we find discrepancies in the book between who a character really is and who others see the character to be? What causes this dissonance?

5. Examine the various representations of family and family structures in the book. Are they very similar? What does this tell us about marriage and family? About the characters? Most of the characters are, or have been, married. What were their reasons for marrying? How is marriage represented in the story? Are these unions mostly successful? What makes them successful or not?

6. Why is Michael Francis so upset by his wife’s haircut and enrollment in history classes?

7. Pregnancy and birth are recurring subjects in the book; the loss that can be associated with them is also explored. Evaluate the scenes that portray pregnancy and birth: Gretta’s births, Monica’s loss, Michael Francis’s children, and Aoife’s pregnancy. What message does the novel seem to present about birth?

8. Whose fault is it that Monica’s secret was found out? How did Monica respond to the secret being revealed to her husband? What is your reaction?

9. The characters reflect throughout the book on various events from their childhoods. What were some of the more memorable events, or events that had the greatest impact on them? What do these revelations seem to indicate about the impact of the past and its relationship to the present?

10. Consider the various conflicts in the novel. There is the problem of Robert’s disappearance, but other conflicts also begin to surface. Are these conflicts resolved? If so, how? How does the larger conflict unite or divide the characters? How does each character respond to conflict?

11. Evaluate the structure of the book. How does it accommodate point of view? Does any single standpoint dominate the story? How does this affect our response to the characters and our interpretation of the story? How would our understanding of the story have been different if it was told in only one point of view?

12. Evaluate the style of the book. Is O’Farrell’s language simple or difficult or complex? What about the sentence structures? How does her style of writing work to create a sense of portraiture, albeit with words?

13. Analyze O’Farrell’s use of flashbacks as a literary device. The characters are constantly recalling moments and events from the past. This allows us to know the unknowable. What insight does it give us into the characters? What does we learn about subjects such as memory, history, and truth?

14. Gretta tries to “keep Ireland alive” (p. 6) through trips to Ireland, Mass and communion, her cooking, and other customs. How do her children respond to her efforts? How does the book create a portrait of the complexities of tradition versus modernity? The characters are all living in different places–different countries, even. What might this say about contemporary living and the modern family?

15. Consider the sense of time in the book. The story takes place over only a few days, yet we get a sense of the entire history of each character from childhood to the present day. How does O’Farrell accomplish this?

16. Evaluate disappearance and estrangement as themes of the novel. While Mr. Riordan’s disappearance takes center stage, instances of disappearance and escape are not limited to his character. What other examples do we find in the novel? What causes these disappearances? What causes the divisions between the characters that grow into estrangement? How could this be helped?

17. What secrets do the characters keep from one another? Is one more surprising than another? If so, why? How do the characters react to the revelation of one another’s secrets?

18. Is Aoife’s disability identified? Why or why not? How does her disability affect how other characters perceive her? How does it affect her life? Does anyone try to help? How does it influence readers’ perception of her character?

19. What does the novel tell us about tragedy and the ways in which we face tragedies? Does each character respond in the same way? Does the way that the characters deal with tragedy change throughout the story?

20. How does this novel compare to O’Farrell’s other works? What are some of the recurring themes? Is their treatment similar? Are there recurring character types or plotlines?

Suggested Reading

Atkinson, Kate.
Behind the Scenes at the Museum
; Binchy, Maeve.
Tara Road
,
The Copper Beech
, and
Evening
Class; Bloom, Amy.
Come to
Me; Edwards, Kim.
The Memory Keeper’s Daughter
; Ferris, Joshua.
The Unnamed
; Flynn, Gillian.
Gone Girl
; Foer, Jonathan Safran.
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
; Franzen, Jonathan.
The Corrections
; Ganesan, Indira.
Inheritance
; Hanilton, Jane.
Disobedience
; Jonasson, Jonas.
The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared
; Joyce, Rachel.
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry
; Kidd, Sue Monk.
The Secret Life of
Bees
; Mapson, Jo-Ann,
The Owl & Moon Cafe
; McEwan, Ian.
Atonement
; Miller, Arthur.
All My Sons
; Morrison, Toni.
Love
; O’Neill, Eugene.
Long Day’s Journey into Night
; Pekkanen, Sarah.
The Opposite of Me
; Porter, Andrew.
In Between Days
; Quindlen, Anna.
Blessings
and
One True Thing
; Rosenfeld, Lucinda.
The Pretty One
; Sittenfeld, Curtis.
Sisterland
; Smith, Ali.
There But For The
; Tan, Amy.
The Joy Luck Club
; Tyler, Anne.
Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
; White, Karen.
The Time Between
; Williams, Tennessee.
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
; Woolf, Virginia.
Mrs. Dalloway
; Yates, Richard.
The Easter Parade
.

ALSO BY MAGGIE O’FARRELL

After You’d Gone

My Lover’s Lover

The Distance Between Us

The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox

The Hand That First Held Mine

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