Ultramarine

Mariette Navarro

Book - 2025

"The metaphysically disorienting tale of a female captain who loses control of her thinking-and her crew-aboard a cargo ship in the Atlantic. Ultramarine begins when the female captain agrees to let her crew stop the engines and go for a swim. But when they return, the crew of mariners is not the original 20, but 21. When the ship itself begins behaving strangely, a haunting question emerges: is she hallucinating, or is this real?The beauty of language comes first in Ultramarine. Navarro's novel pays gorgeous attention to the way the language can mimic the rocking of the boat, the way imagery can convey the vastness of the sea. Brilliant psychological suspense and extraordinary poetry lingers in every word, every sentence. Navarro... has penned a poetic and profound novel that plummets the reader into the psychological realm as well as strikingly deft, restrained and lucidly lyrical prose and pared-down dialogue. In Eve Hill-Agnus's translation, Mariette Navarro establishes herself as an exciting, mature voice in French literature"--

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Psychological fiction
Sea fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
Dallas, Texas : Deep Vellum 2025.
Language
English
French
Main Author
Mariette Navarro (author)
Other Authors
Eve Hill-Agnus (translator)
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781646053575
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Navarro's gripping English-language debut, a French freighter captain's journey takes a perilous turn when a mysterious stranger joins her crew of 20 men. The unnamed captain, 38, maintains a professional but distant relationship with her crew on their voyage to the West Indies. Breaking from her rigorous routine, she grants the men's request to halt the ship for a short swim. The break begins pleasantly, but the men soon become disoriented in the water, not seeing the boat or their fellow swimmers, and instead hallucinating a young man's unfamiliar face. Eventually, they manage to return to the vessel, and after resuming their journey, they discover there are now 21 men aboard. Confusion turns to fear as the ship is engulfed in a thick mist and inexplicably begins to slow down. As the vessel slips further from the captain's control, she fixates on identifying the stowaway and loses interest in reaching their destination, dismissing the crew's mounting concerns that her erratic behavior will lead to their ruin. In spellbinding prose that enhances the novel's nightmarish atmosphere, Navarro explores the captain's profound connection with her ship (evoking the myth of Iphigenia, the captain reflects, "What will we sacrifice, boat? What will we throw into the sea to make you come back to our side?") and the complex gender dynamics aboard. This captivating saga lures and disturbs in equal measure. (Mar.)

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