An ode to the sea – whatever sea, at whatever latitude. But also an ode to life, with “its urgent devouring and assimilation,” and to indigenous time, with its wilting traces and whispering myths. An eco-tale whose transcultural flavour is meant to cross many physical and mental borders. Narrated as if the author had been in spiritual communion with Sedna the mythological creature, goddess of the seas, who “will speak in time to the hearts of all humans on all shores – without them knowing why.
Artfully weaving multiple threads, Lynton Francois Burger has created a vivid tapestry of lives lived within the waters and along the coasts of Canada, South Africa and Mozambique. In She Down There, the story of Claire Lutrísque, a young Canadian (half Haida/half European) marine biologist, beautifully intertwines with that of Klaas Afrikaner, a South African (half Bushman/half European) dive master. Dramatic life events at a personal level develop against the backdrop of wider historical tensions and clashes. Colonialism, postcolonialism and neocolonialism face each other in a dialectic way throughout the story, set between the 1980s and 1990s. All along, humans are called into question for their ocean plunder, the swell relentlessly reminding them of the immediacy of the ecological crisis.
The book starts somewhat slowly and then gradually picks up momentum. Once the reader is past the first 70 pages, s/he will not want to put it down until s/he has finished it."
Arianna Dagnino, author of The Afrikaner (Guernica Editions, Toronto, 2019)