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Our wives under the sea review
Our wives under the sea review












I was drawn into the poetic and careful writing I found so compelling in Armfield’s collection salt slow (2019) and the careful pacing of this novel allowed me to both luxuriate in the language and be drawn in by the plot. Connections between lesbians and the ocean-or women and water more generally-are pervasive in queer writing, but Armfield manages to do something entirely new within the genre. The perspectives in this novel are unique and individual, each rendered with the kind of poetic literary voice I so love to read.Īrmfield’s novel is a contemporary queer gothic that links a love between two women with a love for the sea. The novel’s alternating chapters are also stark because they go some way to reflect the isolation and breakdown communication that the two women endure, allowing the reader to anticipate the convergence of perspectives at the very end. The structure of the narrative, framed in alternating chapters from Miri and Leah’s perspectives, helped to establish a sentence of dual time and mystery in the novel, and Leah’s narrative refuses to answer many of our questions right away and Miri has a difficult time explaining what she’s seeing.

our wives under the sea review

I knew that I would finish this novel in one sitting, and indeed, I was unable to put it down. This was a beautiful novel, full of romantic sensibility and gothic undertones, as queer as it is literary. As Leah begins to change, and as Miri attempts to hold onto the shreds of their normal life together, it becomes more and more clear that this may be something the two women can never come back from.Īs soon as I read about this book’s release, I ordered it from the UK to avoid waiting for the North American release. With the events of Leah’s mission shrouded in mystery, Miri only knows that whatever Leah encountered while she was stranded on the ocean floor, she’s brought some of it back with her. Although Miri has Leah back now, Leah is not the woman Miri married.

our wives under the sea review

Miri’s chapters narrate Leah’s return from a deep-sea mission that culminated in tragedy and unanswered questions, leaving Leah missing for months. Our Wives Under the Sea is a dual-perspective narrative that follows both Miri and her wife Leah. Stunning, poignant, and totally unputdownable, Julia Armfield’s debut novel Our Wives Under the Sea (Picador 2022) is one of my favourite queer novels of 2022!














Our wives under the sea review