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The Genius of the Sea : A Novel [Hardcover]

Naeem Murr (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 3, 2003


From the author of New York Times Notable Book The Boy comes this mesmerizing evocation of the worlds that live within a single man, and the mysteries at the heart of life.

Heralded by The New York Times Book Review as having a "genius for the unexpected," and as a writer of "sharply intelligent prose," Naeem Murr arrived on the literary scene with his critically acclaimed first novel, The Boy. Murr lives up to this praise with his brilliant and original new work.

Daniel Mulvaugh is haunted by his failures. He has tried not to think about the death of his closest friend, for which he feels responsible, or the reasons for his mother's lifelong secrecy. He's estranged from his wife and true love, and his ability to connect to his life has begun to elude him. At this impasse, he can no longer find distraction in his pub-happy friends, or fulfillment in dealing with the squalid troubles of his social welfare clients.

When fate beckons Daniel in the form of Amos Radcliff, a bizarre ex-merchant marine living in Daniel's childhood apartment, he finds comfort in surrendering to this man's stories about his experiences on the high seas. But Amos isn't all he seems, and Daniel soon realizes that the key to his own past resides somewhere in these increasingly intimate and disturbing tales.

Between Amos and Daniel, the story moves back and forth: from the working-class pubs of London to the shantytowns of Bangkok, from a sanatorium for the mentally ill to a South American merchant ship crewed by misanthropic sailors, from this world into a deeper and more mysterious one of primal loss, love, and betrayal.

The Genius of the Sea takes both Daniel and the reader on a journey into a contemporary heart of darkness -- and light. Naeem Murr has crafted a richly compelling waking dream of a book.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The threat of madness hangs like a cloud over this second novel by Murr (The Boy), in which the grimy world of London council estates becomes the backdrop for a far-reaching, exotic tangle of stories. At 38, social worker Daniel O'Mahoney is full of "a panicked longing to make everything right in his life." He blames his Hamlet-like vacillations for his problems, which go back to the death of his secretive mother (she never told him who his father was) and his childhood friend Galvin at almost the same time, nearly 20 years ago. When Daniel went to college, he avoided both of them, and when they died he was secretly relieved. Now Sally, Daniel's beautiful, estranged wife, has taken up residence at a home for the mentally ill, and again Daniel is failing to respond to the situation. Meanwhile, Daniel discovers that one of his agency's clients, Amos Radcliff, is living in Daniel's mother's old council flat and feigning a disability to collect the dole. Amos, an ex-sailor in his 60s, is an illiterate but sesquipedalian storyteller whose stories lead up to one essential tale: how Amos came to murder Andrew Scofield, his bunkmate on the Prince of Scots, and marry Andrew's sister. Daniel gradually realizes that this has to do with the dark secret of his own parentage. Amos's story, which eventually takes over the novel, is reminiscent of Isak Dinesen, cadenced and archetypal. In conjunction with Daniel's more contemporary narrative, it makes this a queer, mesmerizing hybrid of a book. Daniel himself isn't as fully fleshed as he might be, but the novel is a notable, highly original work.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

About the Author

Naeem Murr grew up in London and has lived in America since his early twenties. He received a Masters degree from Syracuse University and was awarded a two-year Creative Writing Fellowship to Stanford. A recipient of numerous awards and scholarships for his writing, he has published a number of prize-winning stories and novellas in literary journals. His first novel, The Boy, a New York Times Notable Book, was translated into six languages.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Free Press (June 3, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743237951
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743237956
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,274,981 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Powerful, provocative, and ultimately hopeful., June 25, 2003
This review is from: The Genius of the Sea : A Novel (Hardcover)
Naeem Murr, a story-teller extraordinaire, speaks to the reader so directly it's as if he's sitting at your elbow, whispering into your ear. The feeling that the author is carefully constructing his tale, which is so often a part of literary novels, is absent here--the construction being more subtle and hidden in the background, as if the author and reader together are "discovering" the story--the mysterious events from childhood about which Daniel Mulvaugh still feels guilt as an adult and which ultimately threaten his sanity.

Growing up in a "council estate" as a child, Daniel and his best friend escaped into vivid, imaginary worlds in an effort to cope with their bleak and frightening lives. Neurotic and timid, Daniel suffered from panic attacks and acrophobia, sometimes fainting with fear, constantly worrying about his mother and the friend on whom he depended. As Daniel's story moves back forth between childhood and his life as a thirty-eight-year-old social worker, we see that he still suffers from acrophobia and panic attacks and that he is unable to "feel" and respond appropriately to the needs of his adored wife Sally, who suffered a breakdown three years before. Now recovered, she has chosen to remain in the caretaker's cottage on the grounds of the hospital, rather than return to Daniel.

Then, into his life comes Amos Radcliffe, an elderly client living in the apartment that Daniel and his mother once shared. Amos tells him stories of his life as a sailor, the people he's met, the sins he's committed, and the guilt he's felt, and the parallels between his own life and that of Daniel are unmistakable. As the nature of his crime is revealed to Daniel, the reader observes their parallel searches for love and communication and their mutual need to confront the past and themselves. While some readers may question whether Amos is "real" or a figment of Daniel's imagination, Daniel himself believes he is real and acts on that assumption. The parallels between their lives are unmistakable, the coincidences are extraordinary, and the similarities in their relationships with others are clear.

Murr stirs the reader's immense sympathy for his characters, showing their humanity as they deal with the past. His observations are acute, and his descriptions, sometimes appearing almost as "throw-aways," are unique. A group of men has "simple lizard brains; they had to blink to swallow their food," and a woman is "an impeccably maintained cul-de-sac of feeling." The dialogue, through which Murr reveals much of the story, is lively and natural, sometimes filled with black humor. The ironies of plot and character are striking, and Murr's comments about the nature of imagination and the nuances of language are insightful. This is a beautifully wrought, carefully constructed, and totally absorbing novel about selfhood, our need to deal with our pasts and our guilt, and the role of imagination in making life bearable. Mary Whipple

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A smart, wonderfully well written book, August 21, 2003
By 
Nigel Craig (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Genius of the Sea : A Novel (Hardcover)
I loved this book. It is strange and compelling, enertaining and beguiling. I first discovered Murr when I read his first novel, "The Boy," which is an utter knockout. This is a substantial, important writer at the outset of what will be an important career.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Powerful, provocative, and ultimately hopeful., April 21, 2008
This review is from: Genius Of The Sea, The (Paperback)
Naeem Murr, a story-teller extraordinaire, speaks to the reader so directly it's as if he's sitting at your elbow, whispering into your ear. The feeling that the author is carefully constructing his tale, which is so often a part of literary novels, is absent here--the construction being more subtle and hidden in the background, as if the author and reader together are "discovering" the story--the mysterious events from childhood about which Daniel Mulvaugh still feels guilt as an adult and which ultimately threaten his sanity.

Growing up in a "council estate" as a child, Daniel and his best friend escaped into vivid, imaginary worlds in an effort to cope with their bleak and frightening lives. Neurotic and timid, Daniel suffered from panic attacks and acrophobia, sometimes fainting with fear, constantly worrying about his mother and the friend on whom he depended. As Daniel's story moves back forth between childhood and his life as a thirty-eight-year-old social worker, we see that he still suffers from acrophobia and panic attacks and that he is unable to "feel" and respond appropriately to the needs of his adored wife Sally, who suffered a breakdown three years before. Now recovered, she has chosen to remain in the caretaker's cottage on the grounds of the hospital, rather than return to Daniel.

Then, into his life comes Amos Radcliffe, an elderly client living in the apartment that Daniel and his mother once shared. Amos tells him stories of his life as a sailor, the people he's met, the sins he's committed, and the guilt he's felt, and the parallels between his own life and that of Daniel are unmistakable. As the nature of his crime is revealed to Daniel, the reader observes their parallel searches for love and communication and their mutual need to confront the past and themselves. While some readers may question whether Amos is "real" or a figment of Daniel's imagination, Daniel himself believes he is real and acts on that assumption. The parallels between their lives are unmistakable, the coincidences are extraordinary, and the similarities in their relationships with others are clear.

Murr stirs the reader's immense sympathy for his characters, showing their humanity as they deal with the past. His observations are acute, and his descriptions, sometimes appearing almost as "throw-aways," are unique. A group of men has "simple lizard brains; they had to blink to swallow their food," and a woman is "an impeccably maintained cul-de-sac of feeling." The dialogue, through which Murr reveals much of the story, is lively and natural, sometimes filled with black humor. The ironies of plot and character are striking, and Murr's comments about the nature of imagination and the nuances of language are insightful. This is a beautifully wrought, carefully constructed, and totally absorbing novel about selfhood, our need to deal with our pasts and our guilt, and the role of imagination in making life bearable. Mary Whipple

The Perfect Man: A Novel
Boy, The
Biography - Murr, Naeem: An article from: Contemporary Authors Online

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE APARTMENT was on the sixteenth floor of Hicks House, one of the five tower blocks of the Windsor Estate. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
being sewn, paddling pool
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Prince of Scots, Hicks House, Amos Radcliff, Dewy Smythe, Joseph Christian, King's Arms, Palm Court, Tower Hamlets, Windsor Estate, East End, Fawlty Towers, Mel Gibson, South America, Swiss Army, Derby Arms, Walnut Street, While Daniel
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