The Surfacing
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
In Irish novelist Cormac James’s “vivid, hypnotic, and acutely piercing” (Colum McCann) North American debut, a ship’s lieutenant discovers a stowaway, pregnant with his child, while battling crushing Arctic ice
“An extraordinary novel, combining a powerful narrative with a considered and poetic use of language. . . . Reading the book, I recalled the dramatic natural landscape of Jack London and the wild untamed seas of William Golding.” —John Boyne
Far from civilization, on the hunt for Sir John Franklin’s recently lost Northwest Passage expedition, Lieutenant Morgan and his crew find themselves trapped in ever-hardening Arctic ice that threatens to break apart their ship. When Morgan realizes that a stowaway will give birth to his child in the frozen wilderness, he finds new clarity and courage to lead his men across a bleak expanse as shifting, stubborn, and treacherous as human nature itself.
A harrowing tale of psychological fortitude against impossible odds, The Surfacing is also a beautifully told story of one man’s transformative journey toward fatherhood.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In his North American fiction debut, Irish-born novelist James draws on the real-life search for John Franklin's lost Arctic exhibition to explore the perils of life at sea, the rugged beauty of the Northwest Passage, and the transformative power of fatherhood. In the spring of 1850, the crew of the Impetus, one of several groups tasked with searching for Franklin's ship, as well as other lost search-party ships, stops at Greenland's Disko Island. There, Lt. Richard Morgan has a tryst with Kitty Rink, the sister of Greenland's Danish governor. Days after the ship's departure, Morgan, who has a wife back in Cork, Ireland, discovers that Rink has snuck on to the ship and is pregnant. After a failed attempt to leave Rink at another port, the crew presses on into the upper reaches of the Arctic. There, during the winter, the ship becomes lodged in a sea of ice, forcing Rink to give birth on board. For Morgan, who fears commitment, the entrance of his son, Thomas, sounds a "call to his better self" even as it infuses the task of returning home with new urgency. Though the novel drags in places, James's sharp prose and attention to detail, particularly to sounds (splintering ice sounds like "plates being popped"), leaves a lasting impression of this momentous journey.