Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer's Reviews > Sea of Tranquility

Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel
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it was amazing
bookshelves: 2022

2022 Goodreads Choice Science Fiction Novel of the Year but also a major highlight of my literary fiction year.

"Is this the Promised End" – Shakespeare, King Lear


"August said that given an infinite number of parallel universes there had to be one where there had been no pandemic …… or one where they’d been a pandemic, but the virus had a subtly different genetic structure, some miniscule variance that rendered it survivable, in any case a universe in which civilization hadn’t been so brutally interrupted" - Emily St John Mandel, Station Eleven


“hallucinations is the wrong word, it’s more like a creeping sense of unreality, a sense of collapsing borders, reality seeping into the counterlife and the counterlife seeping into memory" – Emily St John Mandel, Glass Hotel


Emily St John Mandel’s 2014 fourth novel – the post apocalyptical “Station Eleven” (dealing with the aftermath of a deadly swine flu pandemic and beginning with an actor dying from a heart attack in a production of King Lear) was already something of a classic (nominated for various literary prizes in US, UK and Canada and winner of the 2015 Arthur C Clarke Science Fiction award) before enjoying a huge resurgence (for obvious reasons) in 2020 (and getting its own HBO mini series in December 2021).

I came to the book in 2020 when I read it back to back with her fifth novel “The Glass Hotel” – read together (and I think it is by far the best way to read them) the novels were simply brilliantly. “The Glass Hotel” in particular, alongside its exploration of capitalism and white collar crime with its pseudo-Madoff plot, is really an exploration of ideas such as shadow worlds, ghost worlds, lost worlds, counter-factual narratives, doubleness, parallel realities: and what really makes the books work so well together is that “The Glass Hotel” is effectively the parallel universe mentioned in the “Station Eleven” quote where the devastating pandemic does not happen, but the global financial crisis does, but with many other links between the novels.

See my review here https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

This her sixth novel, to be published later in 2022, is I think best scene as a companion novel to both of its predecessors.

It is set in the “parallel universe” of “The Glass Hotel” – one which at least until 2021 mirrors our own (no Georgia Flu, but a Financial Crisis including the Alkaitis Ponzi scheme and its repercussions) and with explicitly repeating characters (particularly the two wives – Mirella and Vincent – their post crash encounter in “The Glass Hotel” where Mirella refuses to acknowledge Vincent is replayed here from Mirella’s viewpoint).

But it also features a character - Olive Llewelyn – who is an author of a novel “Marienbad” (I assume as a nod by Mandel to the film “Last Year at Marienbad” which per Wikipedia is “famous for its enigmatic narrative structure, in which time and space are fluid, with no certainty over what is happening to the characters, what they are remembering, or what they are imagining”). For Olive after “three books that no one noticed” her fourth novel pandemic-based dystopian novel (not difficult to see the parallels) suddenly made her feel that she had slipped into a “parallel world ………. a bizarre upside down world where people actually read my work”. That novel (which in one key moment has a character rehearsing a line from King Lear) is now being made into a film so she is touring to promote it – later her book sales take off even more during an actual pandemic. In further self-referentiality Olive, whose first main section of the novel is set during a book tour and the second during a lockdown virtual book tour answers questions about what it is like to talk about a book about a pandemic in a pandemic, how many additional sales she has gathered post pandemic, admits the “scientifically implausible flu” in her novel and is critiqued for the “anticlimactical” death scene of the prophet (all of course explicit allusions to “Station Eleven”).

Now Olive’s book tour takes place in 2203 and while based on the Earth begins from her home on a lunar Colony – because this book even more firmly than “Station Eleven” is a science fiction book, with I have to say a plot that reminds me of Harry Harrison and Dr Who.

The book has a Cloud Atlas type nested structure – and of course it is increasingly clear that Mandel shares much of the same multiverse approach as Mitchell – while perhaps I think exploring the idea with more depth and empathy.

The first part of the book takes place in 1912 – an 18 year old third son Edwin St Andrew St John of a rich and titled English family is exiled (after some uncomfortable remarks about the Empire and his mother’s beloved and much mourned Raj – the first sign incidentally that this is a book about lost and mourned for worlds) to Canada (as a “Remittance man”) where he ends on the Island of Caiette (later of course home of The Glass Hotel – actually called Hotel Caiette). There he has a weird experience in a forest (involving a violin and an inexplicable loud noise) shortly after meeting a mysterious priest – Roberts - with a strange accent.

The action then moves to 2020 – as Mirelle waits outside a concert by Paul (to see what she can find out about his sister Vincent) they are joined by an odd man – Gaspery Roberts – who is keen to find out about a glitch in one of Vincent’s forest-based videos which Paul has set to violin music, and who Mirelle recognises from a traumatic childhood incident.

We then move forwards to Olive’s book tour – and an encounter with a journalist who shares a name Gaspery-Jacques – with a character in Marienbad and who is keen to understand about an odd scene in her novel (which seems to have echoes of Edwin’s trauma and Paul/Vincent’s video – a man playing violin in an airship terminal and a sudden juxtaposition of a forest) – one she admits may have biographical elements.

And then in 2401 we meet Gaspery-Jacques Roberts, a hotel detective from the Night City on the moon, who is co-opted into a programme to investigate anomalies in time and we return to each of the previous stories in turn.

Interestingly for me this part contains an interesting reflection on bureaucracy “bureaucracy is an organism, and the prime goal of every organism is self-preservation” which had strong (if controversial) resonances for me of some of the ways in which the UK COVID response has played out. I do not think this was in any way intended but (just as with “Glass House” and “Station Eleven”) it is the strength, universality and topicality of Mandel’s writing that it sets of such unintended resonances.

Olive’s sections start with her literary musings on dystopia and pandemic literature (why one would write it, why readers are attracted to it) in ways which beautifully explore why “Station Eleven” has proved so popular. Later we get extremely resonant reflections on a pandemic – how the world of home can feel like a lost world when one is travelling for work, but how the world of work and travel can feel like a lost world in lockdown.

Overall this is a book which in a science fiction sense moves beyond parallel worlds to explore time travel and the nature of reality against simulation, but which really in an thematic sense (and like all of Mandel’s trilogy of recent books) is much more of a both a love letter to and requiem for our current world, an exploration of belonging, loss, of technology, of relationships, of what provides ultimate fulfillment and where value is ultimately found.

As a standalone novel I am not fully sure how this works (and I do not think it matches the complexity of "Station Eleven") – as part of a body of work it is brilliant.

My thanks to Picador, Pan Macmillan for an ARC via NetGalley
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Reading Progress

January 6, 2022 – Started Reading
January 6, 2022 – Shelved
January 6, 2022 –
page 50
18.25% "And so now we have the Mirella and Vincent bar scene but from Mirella’s viewpoint 10 years later."
January 7, 2022 – Finished Reading
January 8, 2022 – Shelved as: 2022

Comments Showing 1-50 of 53 (53 new)


message 1: by Paul (new)

Paul Fulcher Is that a reference to a previous novel by the same author?


message 3: by Paul (new)

Paul Fulcher So not worth reading if one hasn’t read the others then? Hopefully not on any prize lists in that case.


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer I would suggest reading all three before pretty well any prize list


Neil I see what you mean in your comment under my review about our reviews making similar points!

And I agree with your comment above that reading all three of these novels would be better than reading most prize lists.


message 6: by Paul (new)

Paul Fulcher Doesn't really sell the Netgalley though - have a free book to review (after you've paid for two others you need to read first)!


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Not sure I am trying to sell a NetGalley


Neil It pays to be an early adopter - all three have been available on NetGalley if you were there at the right time. But then I would also buy a copy so that they are also available for the inevitable re-reads.


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Yes I have copies of the first two which I have (rarely for me) kept.


Lisa (NY) Great review - I'm really looking forward to this...


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Thanks Lisa. Have you read Station Eleven and Glass Hotel?


Lisa (NY) Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer wrote: "Thanks Lisa. Have you read Station Eleven and Glass Hotel?" Yes both!


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Great. You will love this then I hope.


message 14: by Andi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Andi Of course you have read and reviewed this, I’m very jealous! She has become a favorite of mine and I can’t wait to read this, brilliant review as always!


Taste_in_Books I loved Station Eleven but not the Glass Hotel. I had no idea there was a connection between the two and now this new one. Thanks for that update and a comprehensive review. From what you wrote it's also giving me Cloud Cuckoo Land vibes.


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer I explore the links between Station Eleven and Glass Hotel in my review of Glass Hotel (linked above) - they are very easy to miss. Things here are a little more obvious.

I have Cloud Cuckoo Land up soon.


Taste_in_Books So sorry I meant to say that I've read Station Eleven but not Glass Hotel 🙈🙈 Nevertheless, this new one sounds intriguing. May I ask if you enjoyed this more than The Glass Hotel? I've read very mixed reviews of that one


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer I thought Glass Hotel was excellent. You really need to read that before this


Hossein Should I read station eleven and glass hotel first?


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Yes I would definitely say so.


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer I think you will love this

It’s always great to discover an author when they are unknown and then be able to follow her career.

I came to EStJM very late.


Hossein D u think it could be nominated for booker? I mean this kind of book could be…


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer I think it’s astonishing she has been omitted from the Booker for the last two books - so yes although I do feel this works better as part of an informal trilogy.


Hossein Yea, but I thought maybe the untold philosophy behind booker( choosing artistic books) prevents this to happen,…


message 26: by Andi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Andi Excellent review as always! I’m with Elyse and loved her first three novels, Last Night in Montreal is one of my favorite books and I was thrilled at the success of Station Eleven! I’m going to reread The Glass Hotel before her new one but yet again, your amazing review and insight bring so much!


message 28: by Tall (new) - rated it 5 stars

Tall I’ve read Station Eleven, but not The Glass Hotel. I’m in the middle of Sea of Tranquillity and don’t seem to,be missing anything. But I’ll go back and check out The Glass Hotel for sure.


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Well some key characters and incidents in this book are taken from Glass Hotel


Evelynn I recommend finding and listening to a few interviews with Emily St John Mandel in podcast form from 2020 if you’re interested (from her press for The Glass Hotel) - there are many things Olive says and does in Sea of Tranquility that make her parallel to Emily St John Mandel even stronger than it already appears without that context, and it’s fun.


LindaJ^ Great review. I loved this book and held off reading any reviews until I wrote mine. I also loved Station Eleven and liked The Glass Hotel. I did not catch the connections between Station Eleven and The Glass House, but certainly did between this and The Glass House! This is my favorite 2022 book to date.


Nailya Oh I'm really looking forward to this one, picking up my pre-ordered copy this weekend. Absolutely loved The Glass Hotel but was unimpressed bu Station Eleven, hoping for the former, not the latter.


message 35: by Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer (last edited May 28, 2022 12:49AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Bit of both really and something different to either.
The Glass Hotel for me only works to its full extent if you read it as an alternative future to Station Eleven.


Hossein Hi , in chapter 3 , speaking about good chicken and bad chicken, I didn’t get what meant by that? Did u get?


Hossein Chickens coming home to roost….(this part)


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Your chickens come home to roost is an English expression (you can Google it) which means bad things you have done in the past eventually emerge and cause you problems in future.

The person is asking why don’t good things you have done also come out later to your credit or benefit.


Hossein I knew that,I meant it’s general meaning in that part of the book? Anyway thanks


Hossein Ok , I got it now, reread it, thanks.


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer It’s also an autofictional anecdote - see the acknowledgments at the end. There is a heavily autofictional /meta fictional element to the book tour anecdotes.


Hossein Yea, actually I didn’t like autofictional parts but those parts merging reality and fiction has been very interesting, generally I think it’s a masterpiece, repeating by myself “I’m real?”at the time of reading , thank u, I just saw the acknowledgement 🙏🙏


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer Have you read The Glass Hotel and Station Eleven - I think undoubtedly the three together are a masterpiece.


Hossein I just started glass hotel when the sea…. Came out, I hope not bothering u, but another paragraph in section 3 of sea… what does stoped me cold? I know its meaning but I want general meaning of that paragraph, what author tried to say by that paragraph?


Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer I think it’s just a link between the discussion of the surprising beauty of AI translation and the discussion of the death of the Prophet in her previous novel (which of course is also heavily meta fictional)


Hossein Thanks 🙏🙏


message 47: by ally (new) - rated it 5 stars

ally I similarly noted and enjoyed the parallelism between Olive and Mandel herself. I think my favourite moment was Olive stating that she had “never been interested in auto-fiction” which felt very cheeky, considering how easily the joke might fly over the head of someone who picks up the book on a whim!


message 49: by Andi (new) - rated it 5 stars

Andi I knew it was a long shot but I was hoping for a Booker Longlist nomination!


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