Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos's Book of Water is a collection of short stories about desire, fear, life, care, and ecological anxiety, all narrated through the physical and metaphysical presence of water. This water is not the open, bucolic water of the romantic imagination. It is the claustrophobic water of the deep seabed, the flooded cities, the womb. It is a water that brings oblivion, serenity, and salvation.At first impression, the stories are narrated by a multiplicity of voices preoccupied with everyday psychological situations. At some point, however, the quotidian withdraws and gives way to surreal and disorienting moments of ethical, political, psychoanalytical, ecological, and personal challenges. The book is a literary response to the current geological epoch of the Anthropocene, where the effect of the human presence on the planet and its various elements seems by now irreversible. The bodies in this collection are not limited to the human-nonhuman and inhuman alike centre in the stories. The protagonist, however, remains the body of water."A gloriously dripping clutch of miniatures, like glimpses through keyholes into unknowable place-times where people pursue curious tasks and succumb to occult intensities."-Sally O'Reilly"Short, fantastic choreographies of bodies, land, and water that embrace the constant motion of aqueous encounters as the sea levels rise, membranes become permeable, and everyday life adjusts to a fluid world."-Tim Creswell"Despite their urgency, these mesmerising encounters between humans and other bodies of water have a deep stillness which lures the reader ever deeper into a surreal and mutable underworld."-Nancy Campbell"The wonder of water is alive in these pages, not in raging storms or deep sea expeditions, but in a quotidian magical realism, where gardens become floatation tanks and paragraphs are wet words to swallow."-Astrida Neimanis"An opera to life told through the myriad of small gestures made by humans and many others. This writing captures the beauty of aimlessness that leads to the making of an enchanting world."¬-Ursula Biemann"In this elegant collection, every border is excitingly fluid and debatable, even those between human beings and their choices, their lovers, and their furniture. The effect is destabilizing in the most lyrical and illuminating way."-Michelle Lovric"You don't so much read Book of Water, you float in it. These haunting little fictions heighten some senses while softening others, to an effect that is curiously hallucinatory. Never have words felt so liquid, or stories so cool and refreshing."-Robert Shearman"[The stories] are so condensed and beautifully nuanced they can be read almost as a sequence of prose poems linked by a series of 'liquid bridges'. Book of Water will haunt you with the resonance of its poetic undoing long after it has slipped from your hands."-Alisson Smith, THE LINCOLN REVIEW"I thoroughly enjoyed the surrealism, playfulness of the shapeshifting and sheer immersiveness of the writing."-Laura Windley, THE SHORT STORY"This is a book that brims with feeling, taking typical situations and conflicts and reducing them to their primitive, primeval selves."-Melissa Todd, CONFLUENCE