Daisy Johnson, the youngest writer ever shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2018 for her debut Everything Under, has returned with a new masterpiece. Her latest novel, Long Wave, is a deeply moving exploration of motherhood, memory, and the haunting power of family secrets. Critics are already calling it her finest work yet, blending poetic imagery with raw emotional truth.
The story follows three generations of mothers: Ori, Ruth, and Edith. As a small child, Ori was found abandoned on a wild, uninhabited island off the coast of England. She was later adopted by a scientist specializing in hares, but the mystery of why her mother left her there never fades. Now, as a new mother herself, Ori struggles with postpartum anxiety and the weight of unanswered questions.
A Tale of Three Women and Their Tangled Legacies
Ruth, Ori's mother, witnessed a traumatic event at age 10: an apparent suicide of a mother with her baby in a nearby river. Yet the police found no trace of either. This unsolved mystery haunts Ruth and shapes her relationship with Ori. Meanwhile, Edith, Ruth's mother, locked her daughter away out of shame for a pregnancy out of wedlock.
Johnson masterfully weaves these fragmented narratives together. The novel demands patience from the reader, but those who sit with the uncertainty are richly rewarded. The poetic language and mythic undertones create a reading experience that is both unsettling and beautiful.
Johnson's Signature Blend of Myth and Mundanity
Johnson's talent has always been her ability to combine vivid, fairytale-like imagery with grounded, everyday details. In Long Wave, we find mountain hares with thick white coats who have never seen a human, a semi-derelict lighthouse behind a forest of thorns, and a child bashing stones together to guide her mother home.
Yet she juxtaposes these fantastical elements with stark reality: pavements sticky with Calippo and crushed cigarettes, blue NHS hospital curtains, and the rattle of a trolley on linoleum. This contrast creates a sublime effect that makes the emotional weight of the story feel immediate and true.
The Raw Specificity of Early Motherhood
Johnson's language around early motherhood is particularly striking. She captures the suffocating exhaustion: “The tiredness is like a suffocating, papery snow.” She describes the fontanelle with its “immediacy of aliveness,” the movement of a baby's mouth dreaming of milk, and the nipple pain of breastfeeding.
One of the most powerful lines captures the overwhelming bond: “She has the enormous sense that he is drinking all of her.” These details ground the novel's mythic elements in a deeply personal, almost visceral reality.
Themes of Intergenerational Trauma
The novel explores how our earliest relationships come back to haunt us. Ori's struggle to bond with her baby is directly tied to her own abandonment. Ruth's trauma shapes her inability to mother. Edith's shame echoes through decades.
This theme of intergenerational trauma is handled with nuance and empathy. Johnson does not offer easy answers but instead invites readers to sit with the complexity of love, loss, and forgiveness.
Critical Reception and Comparisons
Early reviews have been glowing. Critics compare Long Wave favorably to Johnson's earlier works, including Fen, Sisters, and The Hotel. Many praise its emotional depth and lyrical prose. The novel is being hailed as a standout in contemporary literary fiction.
For readers who enjoy literary fiction with a touch of the uncanny, or stories about mother-daughter relationships, Long Wave is an essential read. It is a book that stays with you long after the final page.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Long Wave by Daisy Johnson about?
Long Wave is a novel about three generations of mothers: Ori, Ruth, and Edith. It explores themes of abandonment, postpartum struggle, and intergenerational trauma. The story begins with Ori being found as a child on a deserted island and follows her journey as a new mother trying to understand her own past.
Is Long Wave part of a series or a standalone novel?
Long Wave is a standalone novel. While it shares thematic elements with Johnson's earlier works like Fen and Sisters, it is a completely new story with its own characters and setting. Readers do not need to have read her previous books to enjoy this one.
What writing style can readers expect from Long Wave?
Johnson is known for her blend of poetic, mythic imagery with grounded, everyday details. In Long Wave, this style is particularly effective, creating a sublime reading experience. Her language around early motherhood is praised for its specificity and emotional accuracy.