“They both spring from the same core, touching on quite primal feelings and fears. “Horror centres around a lot of the same things that I think work in romance,” she says. She leans on her elbows and speaks quickly. In Our Wives Under the Sea, Armfield continues her unique conjuring of the uncanny, as we follow Miri and her wife Leah – who works in deep-sea research – into the sinking abyss.Īrmfield is sitting at her kitchen table, the countertop messy behind her. One of its stories, “The Great Awake”, in which sleep steps out of peoples’ bodies and wanders around at night, won the 2018 White Review short story prize. Her first book, 2019’s salt slow, is an eerie, sexy collection of short stories that injects the mythic and monstrous into mundanity, with unsettling flashes of winged women and stone lovers. The 31-year-old Londoner has just published her debut novel, Our Wives Under the Sea. “In some ways, I think the two things are synonymous.” “Horror is the most romantic genre,” the author says when we speak over Zoom, a few days before Valentine’s Day. Julia Armfield has an unconventional attitude to romance. ‘There is a myth that writing is a rarefied occupation’ (Sophie Davidson)
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