I really wish I hadn’t missed seeing this author when he spoke recently at the Melbourne Writers Festival as I’m sure it would have been just as fascinating as his recent book, Twist.
Probably like many, I had no idea that our internet comes to us via a series of cables which run deep under the world’s oceans. When one snaps as they can do, experts rush to find the cable break and fix it. It’s not easy because these cables can be kilometers deep where divers can’t get to.
McCann writes a story about one of these breaks and John Conway, a man charged to crew a vessel to find the break off the coast of Africa and fix it. The story is told from the point of view of writer, Anthony Fennel a borderline alcoholic who has been sent to write an article about a cable break. He meets Conway, his partner Zanele who’s an actress and their twin children. When Zanele leaves to take an acting role in London, Fennel wonders about their relationship while examining his own life as an estranged father.
The cable story, while interesting is a device to delve into broken people like Conway and Fennel, their relationships with others as well as each other and their secrets. Fennel is witness to Conway’s unraveling and in the process, we find out who these men really are.
The writing is truly exquisite, beautifully evocative with meaningful description which elevated this book for me.
“It was as if the Congo was purging itself, all that history, all that rancour under the sun, under the swollen stars, a rage of soil heading out into the channel, an underwater canyon that stretched for hundreds of kilometers… a place where there was no light except that which was throbbing within the cable, carrying in turn, just about everything.”
Give this one a go.







