Our Wives Under the Sea is a gentle, but chilling horror story by Julia Armfield. Two women are married and one of them is a marine biologist being sent on a submarine to explore deep ocean life. A planned three-week voyage becomes six months and when the sub finally surfaces again, Leah, the biologist, has “come back wrong.” She’s transforming. Something happened to her under all that water. Told alternately by Leah and Miri, the story is one of loss and mourning and lack of any reasonable explanation. Haunting, in a word. The writing is exceptional. And probing. I quite enjoyed this book. I can’t recall how I first heard about it—it was published in 2022—but I knew I wanted to read it even then. The sea is that way. Moby-Dick, cited in an epigraph, has always been my favorite novel. One of my early reading memories is Rachel Carson’s The Sea Around Us (also cited here). The story is a winner.
There’s something about the ocean. We, in reality, know little about it. Penetrating the crushing depths requires a well-funded science, something we’ve moved away from in favor of personal greed. Life takes unexpected forms deep under the surface, even as we deplete the resources we can reach—over-fishing and consuming. We’re never told what it is Leah and her crew-mate see so far down. We all know of lantern-fish (lately in the news) and other sub-surface terrors. We don’t know the potential life we might discover if we only cared to look. The company that sent Leah down, however, is as shadowy as the government. Promising help but not answering the phone when you call. Yes, this is a haunting book.
Mostly, however, at least in my reading, it is about coping. We attach our lives to others and when something changes them we have to try to adjust, because love is that way. Caregivers understand. The novel evokes both the endless draw of the ocean and its mystery. Even as a child I wanted to live on the stormy east coast, preferably in Maine. I wanted to be near the water. As my mother was in her final decline, one of her dearest wishes was to return to the ocean. She’d spent a fair bit of her childhood in New Jersey and always felt the draw of the sea. She was no swimmer, but just being near the ocean was something she loved. And that has passed down, it seems, to my generation. Fearful yet drawn. It is the dilemma that can lead to effective horror stories that make you both think and feel.
