Author: Emily St. John Mandel
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Edwin is an English aristocrat exiled by his family to Canada in 1912. Mirella is a receptionist in 2020 New York. Olive is a novelist on a book tour in 2203. Their lives are connected by a shared, extraordinary experience and by their encounters with a time traveler, Gaspery Roberts. Perhaps coincidentally, they are also connected by the fact they each had these experiences immediately prior to a global pandemic.
To tell more about the story would be to give too much away. I already fear I've said too much. And it would be a shame if my post did anything to discourage anyone from reading Sea of Tranquility. It was my most rewarding read in quite a long time.
I read a lot of books and enjoy most of what I read. What I long for, though, is a book that makes me want to do nothing but curl up in a corner and lose myself in the narrative, perhaps even to forget that I'm reading. I want to be invited into a world I hate to leave when the book is over. That level of immersion has been much more difficult to find as an adult than it was as a child. It's possible, of course, that I've been reading the wrong books.
Sea of Tranquility is the closest I've come to realizing that ideal in years. The fact that it's a time travel story is all the more extraordinary. As frequent visitors to The Squid have likely caught on, I approach such stories with great skepticism and tend to leave them annoyed and frustrated. Mandel's take on the concept didn't bother me. She certainly deserves credit for tidiness - time travel has rules in this book and she sticks to them. And the answer to the central question - which I won't reveal - satisfies me. I cared a lot more about what happened to the characters, especially Gaspery, than I did about the time travel consistency. I can assure you, that is not easily said for me. Mandel also deserves a lot of credit for a relatable rendering of the lockdown experience as well as a vision of the future that is not overly sensationalized.
A snippet that spoils nothing but does exhibit the emotional intimacy Mandel allows the reader to have with her characters:
She never dwelt on my lapses, and I couldn't entirely parse why this made me feel so awful. There's a low-level, specific pain in having to accept that putting up with you requires a certain generosity of spirit in your loved ones.
So yes, I would love to read more books like Sea of Tranquility. Bravo!
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