The Water All Around Us

This is a book dominated by water – love and awe for the ocean permeate every page. The sea’s beauty and life-giving energy, and its danger and risks, are explored – as is the fact these two effects are inextricably linked. The sea is often both the problem and the solution. 

The Water All Around Us cover image - a  lone whale in a turquoise sea

Author: Lynn Michell 

One morning, an enormous sperm whale beaches on a remote island in the Hebrides, a place where whales most certainly do not belong. It’s a surprise to everyone except nine-year-old Fenn, who’s been listening, and talking back, to the whale lost in their waters for days.

The arrival of the creature is a momentous event in the life of the island – none of the children go to school that day, and all the residents join the desperate work to keep the dying animal wet and cool, then attempt to refloat him on the next high tide. 

From this opening image, we go back in time to learn about the weeks and months prior to the whale’s arrival.

We meet Fenn’s parents, a painter and a crofter tackling the challenge of making a good, sustainable life on the island, and the perhaps greater challenge of understanding their wayward daughter. 

We meet Jess, a former marathon swimmer, as at home in the sea as a human can be, who’s trying to escape from a terrible, haunting incident in her past. These characters creep up on you, introduced gently as they go about their ordinary lives in this extraordinary place. They grip you stealthily, by degrees – by the final few chapters, I was in love with them, and sobbing.

As the title suggests, this is a book dominated by water – love and awe for the ocean permeate every page. The sea’s beauty and life-giving energy, and its danger and risks, are explored – as is the fact these two effects are inextricably linked. The sea is often both the problem and the solution. 

Michell also delves into the impact humanity has on the ocean in return. Lyrical sections from the perspective of the whale himself heartbreakingly explore climate change and the impact of what we dump in our seas, whales dying with stomachs full of plastic.

The overwhelming energy of the book is hopeful though – personified in the reckless, pure soul of the child Fenn. In a book about belonging, and not belonging, and loss, she is the story’s beautiful defiant beating heart.

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