Sunday, June 16, 2013

Review: Float by JoeAnn Hart

I love to scuba dive. Floating underwater and reveling in the beauty of the ocean is unsurpassed. But it's not all beauty. I have seen plastic grocery bags snagged on coral, waving in the surge, and other detritus skimming along the bottom of the ocean or settled into the sand. Litter is not confined to just what we can see and we are, unfortunately, polluting the great and glorious sea as if what we can't see won't hurt us. But it does, and eventually it washes up on our beaches, forcing us to confront our careless negligence. JoeAnn Hart's newest novel, Float, takes a darkly comedic look at this very serious topic.

Duncan Leland's business, a factory which converts fish waste from the local fishing fleet into commercial fertilizer, is struggling financially and he's having to contemplate a connection with the shadiest citizen in town to save it. His marriage is on very shaky ground and his wife has kicked him out so he's moved back home to live with his nutty mother and oddball brother. His life is not looking or feeling like much of a success. So when he sees the words God Help Us traced into the sand below his office window, he rushes down to obliterate them, fearful of their meaning and the bad publicity. While on the shoreline, he finds a wounded seagull tangled up in a plastic six-pack holder and proceeds to rescue it without knowing that his actions are being filmed and will land on YouTube, turning him and the gull into internet sensations.

Duncan is a rather undirected dreamer and he might just be the most normal character in the novel. His mother is usually three sheets to the wind on homemade wine. She's unwilling to leave her large ramshackle home and directs Duncan's brother's sailing career from the top story of the large house as he enters and fails to win local regatta after regatta. Duncan's best friend, Slocum, is a chef whose seafood-based creations are beyond strange and completely inedible. His employees at the factory seem undecided whether to support Duncan or to undermine his efforts to keep the factory solvent, with one woman, Annuncia, loudly driving business away with her militantly environmental screed.

Each of the characters who make an appearance on the page here is eccentric and kooky and the multiple plot lines are definitely over the top. But there are weighty and important issues buried in the black humor: the human impact on the world's oceans, infertility which might be caused by our careless disposal (and over-reliance on) plastics, overfishing and the economic impact of this, to name a few. The sheer number of plot lines and the too easy resolution of some of them strain the reader a bit and the end revelation about Duncan's father takes the novel into the realm of just a little too much. Still, overall this was an enjoyable read which shines a light on the possible toll our continued inattentiveness to our environment could exact.

Thanks to the publisher for sending me a copy of the book to review.

4 comments:

  1. Divers know first hand the horrors of plastics in the oceans, as you have see for yourself, and fiction is as good a place as any to spread the message. Thank you for the lovely words.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Divers know first hand the horrors of plastics in the oceans, as you have see for yourself, and fiction is as good a place as any to spread the message. Thank you for the lovely words.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks, Kristen, for such a thoughtful read and for highlighting the issues of the oceans in this review.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks, Kristen, for a thoughtful read and for highlighting the issues facing the oceans in your review.

    ReplyDelete

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