
Member Reviews

Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield is a gorgeous book about discovery, loss, grief, and memory. Told in alternating chapters between Leah - a deep sea explorer who's been at the ocean's floor for six months - and her wife Miri - who's been waiting for her to resurface. Armfield’s prose is ominous, beautiful, haunting, and a little disturbing. This is already one of my favorite novels of 2022, maybe ever. And really, I can’t stop thinking about it!

Good book. Kept me entertained.. Had a unique story line which I appreciated. So many stories these days are so similiar.

The first half of this book could've been done away with. It was mainly useless information about the characters lives before the plot of the story takes place. Nothing pertaining to the story line. I almost didn't finish it.
The second half picks up and starts to get interesting. It sticks more to the major plot line, starts to unravel the mystery of what happened under water. Just when you think you're going to get some answers, the books ends. I was infuriated.
This had a lot of promise and the summary was deceiving to say the least. The author seemed to care more about word choice than actually writing a good story. You're left with more questions than answers. It was just blah.
I honestly wouldn't have finished it, but I was given a free copy from Netgalley and felt obligated.

Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield is an exploration of grief when the person you are grieving is right beside you. This book is a sapphic horror focused on the anticipation of a loss yet to come. It is melancholic and atmospheric. At times you will feel as claustrophobic as the characters as they pull you into their environment and tell you what they’ve learned.
Miri’s wife, Leah, a marine biologist, is on a deep sea observation mission that is set to last three weeks. When Leah’s vessel fails to emerge after months and the organization Leah works for is fielding Miri’s calls, she assumes Leah is dead. That is, until Leah finally comes home. The Leah that has returned, however, is unlike the Leah that left. She is a shadow of herself, and Miri is left desperately trying to save the woman she loves from whatever unknown events took place on the ocean floor.
This book is a gripping horror. The pacing is slow to start, but the story kept my interest throughout. Around the halfway point I found myself unable to put the book down. With a dual perspective, both Miri and Leah having alternating chapters, you read both past and present simultaneously until the timelines meet. This formatting enhanced the suspense factor of both perspectives. Also to this point, however, I found Miri’s chapters slightly repetitive as the story went on. They sometimes felt like a break in the story rather than an addition.
What I loved about this story was the depth of the relationship between Miri and Leah, told through glimpses of their life before and the care Miri shows Leah once everything has gone to ruin. The claustrophobic atmosphere of the ocean’s expanse versus the small apartment the couple share is a fantastic parallel highlighting Leah’s neverending mission. I truly felt Leah’s uncertainty and eventual submission as well as Miri’s longing and loss.
I’d recommend this to anyone looking for a bit of body horror and a bit of sadness to keep them up at night. All in all, this book delivers on what it promises.

this book came into my home, reached into my chest, uprooted my entire circulatory system, and left me for dead and i not only enjoyed it but also said thank you

Very interesting concept but the writing style was not for me. Unfortunately as I felt a disconnect as I believe it was the writing style of the book. I applaud the author as it is the right book for the correct audience. It just wasn’t to my taste. I applaud the author, however as it is an original premise.

I loved this book! This is one of my most anticipated reads for 2022 and it did not disappoint. I will absolutely be purchasing a physical copy.

The mystery of how and why Leah's "accident" occurred pulls you along, but doesn't have a satisfactory resolution. I kept wondering where all the lawyers were.
I like how the monotony of sickness, of gradually losing someone, is conveyed. The ocean is talked about in ways that capture how vast, oppressive, and strange it is.
It all felt sort of inevitable, sustained by lack of communication between the characters, which I found frustrating. Close up, line by line, I enjoyed it.

The concept of this book was fascinating, but it ended up just not being for me. The prose and language successfully created a very atmospheric story; however, I often felt a strong disconnect from the characters and story. I do applaud and really enjoyed the author's way of creating a very eerie and haunting atmosphere that left me feeling claustrophobic and unsettled like the characters were.
thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for this arc in exchange for an honest review!

Whew, I just finished this book and I don't exactly know what to think of it yet. It's unexpected. The tension builds slowly, the writing is as claustrophobic as the plot (which is a good thing), and the characters are compelling (if a little underdeveloped). I couldn't put it down, and I was compelled to keep reading to find out what had happened. The ending was entirely satisfying, even if I wanted more. I don't know how I'm going to be able to talk about this book without giving everything away.

I am so confused on how to rate this book or what I feel about it after reading it. Yes, FEEL because this is THAT kind of story. I've had the range experiencing this story; interested, involved, afraid, frustrated, happy, peaceful, scared and disgusted. I mean, wow. Did I like this? yes but then, not so much? Too much is left hanging, undetermined and unclear for my usual tidy mind. I like things wrapped up! This leaves so much uncertainly that you're forced to really take it for what it's worth, the story of the Ultimate action in the name of love. This will haunt me I'm sure. It already has. And I KNOW that one day, I'll come back around and visit this book again, looking for and not finding any of the answers I so want to have.

In the before times, Miri was the difficult wife, the one who went through periods of withdrawal and melancholy. But when Leah's research trip aboard a submarine goes terribly wrong, leaving her trapped at the bottom of the sea for months, she returns changed. She can't seem to explain anything about her experience, instead spending hours in the bath, running the taps, and drinking salt water. Alternating between Miri and Leah's perspectives, Our Wives Under the Sea explores the dangers of the deep, the way trauma reshapes us, and the unexpected turns in intimate relationships.
I FOUGHT to get my hands on a copy of this book because the lesbian bookternet has been gushing about it, and it totally lived up to the hype! Haunting prose, a creeping sense of doom, and terrifying deep sea depictions make this book impossible to put down. I still feel Miri and Leah's story in my bones days after finishing it, wondering what was real and what was imagined. I'll never look at the sea the same way again.

First of all, yes, this is a singularly strange book: Miri’s beloved wife Leah has finally returned from a deep-sea exploration gone wrong, and she seems to slowly but surely be turning into some kind of ocean creature. The story alternates between Miri’s and Leah's perspectives, but we never hear from Leah once she surfaces - we only learn, in bits and pieces that jigsaw-puzzle together around holes never quite filled in, what might have happened in that dark and crushing pressure at the bottom of the sea.
If pushed to describe it, I'd say imagine vestiges of the plot from Dr. Franklin's Island (Ann Halam), with the stunned disbelief - articulated in the most hauntingly beautiful ways - of finding oneself in a completely new reality from Station Eleven (Emily St. John Mandel), with amassing undertones of the amorphous dread so compellingly conveyed in Leave the World Behind (Rumaan Alam).
While the plot is extraordinary in every sense of the word, the story manages to be deeply, heartbreakingly relatable. Ambiguous loss - the specific type of grief you feel when the person you love still exists, in a sense, but isn't the same - is universal, and this eerie and beautiful book is fundamentally about it.
I loved this book and believe it will be one of the most-discussed, most-acclaimed of 2022.

I read this book in one sitting and have to say, it's one of my favorite books, period. I'm obsessed! The writing is elegant and unsettling, a perfect combination for me. It's literary, which I love in general, but also blends in science fiction/light dystopia, which isn't usually my thing, but I was totally into it for this book. I think the voice and prose keep it from feeling like "stereotypical" genre fiction. I love the queer domesticity, and the horror in it, and the love, too. If I could read this book with fresh eyes, I would immediately, just to get the same excitement with each page. Also, I want this made into a movie!!

Our Wives Under The Sea is not a read for everyone. I finished it and was like “ well that’s a waste of time. “
But as days went on, the writing seemed to haunt me as I unpacked everything I had just read.
Julia Armfields novel is melancholy, full of love, loss, grief, and even horror.
Armfields novel centers around a married couple Mimi and Leah. Leah was “trapped” underwater for months when an underwater research project goes wrong. And once she returned to the surface, she is no longer the same. With Alternating points of view Leahs narrative told of her time under the ocean, while Mimi’s told in present tense time.
While Leah struggles to be present again now that she is home, Mimi’s voice grieves for the women she loves. Armfields story is lyrical, her writing is poetic in how it shows grief, loss, and letting go.
Thank you PanMacmillian for the ARC via Netgally.

This was a beautifully written book that touched upon loss, grieving, and relationships. It was an enjoyable read and I was sucked in and finished the book in two days. I took off a star because I found the ending to be inconclusive to the answers I was seeking.

I found the premise of this book fascinating but the reading was a bit difficult. The two perspective narration and the plot line were not quite in synch for me. Though the characters were compelling and true to life, even with the supernatural nature of the book. I enjoyed this book, but there were a lot of questions left unanswered because of the ambiguity of the background devices used in the story.

A mesmerizing read so beautifully written emotionally moving.A story of grief a story that will haunt and stay with you.An author who writes so poetically so unnervingly.Will be recommending the book the author.#netgalley #flatironbooks.

"I'm not drowning, I'm waving" is what I want on my tombstone. This book would agree.
Lyrical is an overused book review word, right? But what if you could tattoo a feeling on your body. What if a book was a song. What if what if what if more books were like this one? Things would be better.

I raced through Julia Armfield’s short story collection, Salt Slow, in 2020. So when buzz began to build around her debut novel, the fantastically titled Our Wives Under the Sea, I had incredibly high hopes. I am delighted to confirm that this gorgeous book exceeded all my expectations.
Our Wives Under the Sea is the story of a couple, told in alternating chapters. Leah tells a story of claustrophobic horror, an exploratory dive gone horrible wrong. Miri shares how Leah returns from the incident an understandably different person.
Armfield’s prose is literally breathtaking. The contrasting chapters really work. Leah is the scientific type; fact-driven with sparse descriptions. Miri focuses on the range of emotions that come with caring for a loved one who, through no fault or their own, changes mentally or physically; the guilt, the resentment, the overwhelming myriad of emotions is captured beautifully.
And if that wasn’t enough, the story alone is one of the most intriguing I’ve read in a long time. Armfield creates a real sense of unease, and the reader is never completely sure what is real or not. Like all truly unsettling novels, some things are never really explained. I’m still thinking about it weeks later.
Armfield’s prose is literally breathtaking. The contrasting chapters really work. Leah is the scientific type; fact-driven with sparse descriptions. Miri focuses on the range of emotions that come with caring for a loved one who, through no fault or their own, changes mentally or physically; the guilt, the resentment, the overwhelming myriad of emotions is captured beautifully.
My personal recommendation is, and please forgive the pun, to take an afternoon to completely immerse yourself in this story. Our Wives Under the Sea is as close to a perfect novel as it can get. I can absolutely see myself re-reading this whenever I get the chance. Put this on your wishlist right now.