SEA LEVEL
"My father did not travel, so I travel. When he was a young man he twice visited Dieppe. In his fifties we took a package tour to Austria, but soon after he had his first heart attack and did not attempt travel again. In any case, being out there, away from England, away from his women, made him nervous, and anxious to return. Distance scraped away his skin, leaving him exposed to pain. Later, when I started leaving England, he was full of admiration for my hardiness and pleased for me that I was not like him."
A brilliant and profoundly affecting novel about a man in mid-life struggling to come to terms with his father’s death, the women in his life, and the pain and puzzle of human existence.
Moving with extraordinary skill and beauty across continents, between past and present, from inner reality to outer event, it is the story of Bill Bender, a sensual, troubled, imperfect man, and his fraying connections to the people he loves, his work as an international do-gooder, and his London past.
From Pakistan to Polynesia, his drama is enacted against a fascinating international background with a powerfully realized cast of characters. Among them are Han, Bender’s fiercely amoral Chinese lover, a woman of great erotic power; Akira, his eccentric Japanese colleague, crazed by whisky and his inability to comprehend the doublespeak of foreign aid; the elderly, ailing Mr. Yamada, embodying impenetrable cultural mysteries; and Bender’s father, a self-effacing London milkman of limited horizons, whose death shakes him in ways that surprise him, and in whom he comes uneasily to recognize a reflection of himself.