Submergence
In a room with no windows on the eastern coast of Africa, an Englishman, James More,
               is held captive by jihadist fighters. Posing as a water engineer to spy on al-Qaeda
               activity in the area, he now faces extreme privation, mock executions and forced marches
               through arid Somali badlands. Thousands of miles away on the Greenland Sea, Danielle
               Flinders, a biomathematician, prepares for a dive to the ocean floor to determine
               the extent and forms of life in the deep.
               
               Both are drawn back, in their thoughts, to the Christmas of the previous year, and
               to a French hotel on the Atlantic coast, where a chance encounter on the beach led
               to an intense and enduring romance, now stretching across continents. For James, a
               descendant of Thomas More, his mind escapes to utopias, and fragments of his life
               and learning before his incarceration, now haunting him. Danny is drawn back to mythical
               and scientific origins and to the ocean: immense and otherworldly, a comfort and a
               threat.
            
            Oldenburg Reading Group, 14 January 2019
         