Cover of Open Water

Book Highlights

Open Water

by Caleb Azumah Nelson

What it's about

This novel explores the internal struggle of a young Black man navigating love, artistic identity, and the suffocating weight of systemic trauma in London. It captures the tension between the safety of hiding one’s vulnerability and the desperate, painful necessity of being truly seen by another person.

Key ideas

  • The vulnerability paradox: Choosing to hide in darkness is often easier than emerging into the light, even though silence eventually leads to suffocation.
  • The weight of perception: Being a Black man in a world that assumes you are dangerous forces you to internalize external projections, which complicates how you see yourself.
  • The limits of language: Words frequently fail to capture the intensity of human intimacy and the complex, messy reality of being in love.
  • Love as a risk: Loving someone requires the trust to place your most fragile parts next to theirs, knowing that the relationship could eventually fracture.

You'll love this book if...

  • You enjoy lyrical, poetic prose that prioritizes emotional atmosphere over traditional plot.
  • You're looking for a raw perspective on how past trauma and societal expectations shape the way we connect with others.

Best for

Anyone processing the ache of a past relationship or the quiet intensity of falling in love for the first time.

Books with the same vibe

  • Normal People by Sally Rooney
  • On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong
  • The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz

30 popular highlights from this book

Key Insights & Memorable Quotes

The most popular highlights from Open Water, saved by readers on Screvi.

You have always thought if you opened your mouth in open water you would drown, but if you didn't open your mouth you would suffocate. So here you are, drowning.
What you're trying to say is that it's easier for you to hide in your own darkness, than emerge cloaked in your own vulnerability. Not better, but easier. However the longer you hold it in, the more likely you are to suffocate.At some point, you must breathe.
It’s one thing to be looked at, and another to be seen.
Every time you remember something, the memory weakens, as you’re remembering the last recollection, rather than the memory itself. Nothing can remain in tact. Still, it does not stop you wanting, does not stop you longing.
What is better than believing you are heading towards love?
You ache. You ache all over. You are aching to be you, but you're scared of what it means to do so.
You know that to love is both to swim and to drown. You know to love is to be a whole, partial, a joint, a fracture, a heart, a bone. It is to bleed and heal. It is to be in the world, honest. It is to place someone next to your beating heart, in the absolute darkness of your inner, and trust they will hold you close. To love is to trust, to trust is to have faith. How else are you meant to love? You knew what you were getting into, but taking the Underground, returning home with no certainty of when you will see her next, it is terrifying.
Perhaps that is how we should frame this question forever; rather than asking what is your favourite work, let’s ask, what continues to pull you back?
It's easier to hide in your own darkness, than to emerge, naked and vulnerable, blinking in your own light.
Ask: if flexing is being able to say the most in the fewest number of words, is there a greater flex than love?
Besides, sometimes, to resolve desire, it's better to let the thing bloom. To feel this thing, to let it catch you unaware, to hold onto the ache. What is better than believing you are heading towards love?
There’s so much more you wish to say but there aren’t the words.
You have always wondered under what conditions unconditional love breaks, and you believe that betrayal might be one of them.
Language fails us, and sometimes our parents do too. We all fail each other, sometimes small, sometimes big, but look, when we love we trust, and when we fail, we fracture that joint.
I know I'm a photographer, but if someone else says I'm that, it changes things because what they think about me isn't what I think about me.
To give desire a voice is to give it a body through which to breathe and live. It is to admit and submit something which is on the outer limits of your understanding.
You wish you had the words, no, you wish you had the courage to climb up from whatever pit you have fallen into, but right now, you do not.
You've been wondering about your own relationship to open water. You've been wondering about the trauma and how it always finds its way to the surface, floating in the ocean. You've been wondering about how to protect that trauma from consumption. You've been wondering about departing, about being elsewhere.You have always thought if you opened your mouth in open water you would drown, but if you didn't open your mouth you would suffocate. So here you are, drowning.
Your few days together have been spent doing nothing really, which is something, is an intimacy in itself.
You dance through topics like two old friends, finding comfort in a language which is instantly familiar. You create a small world for yourselves, and for you both only, sitting on this sofa, looking out at the world which has a tendency to engulf even the most alive.
She tells you she loves you and now you know that you don't have to be the sum of your traumas, that multiple truths exist, that you love her too.
Meeting someone on a summer's evening is like giving a dead flame new life.
To love someone like that, to know how beautiful and wholesome and healing such a love is, and to turn your back on it required no strength at all.
She still thinks about you a lot. Your lives unstitched themselves, but the loose threads remain where the garment was torn.
It's -' You pause, frowning to yourself as you reach for the right expression. 'You can't live in a vacuum. And when you let people in and you make yourself vulnerable, they're able to have an effect on you. If that makes sense.
What you’re trying to say is that it’s easier for you to hide in your own darkness, than emerge cloaked in your own vulnerability. No better, but easier. However, the longer you hold it in, the more likely you are to suffocate.At some point, you must breathe.
It is a strange thing, to desire your best friend; two pairs of hands wandering past boundaries, asking forgiveness rather than permission; "Is this OK?" coming a fraction after the motion.
You flash the smile of a king but you both know regicide is rife.
of unresolved grief, large and small, of others assuming that he, beautiful Black person in gorgeous Black body, was born violent and dangerous; this assumption, impossible to hide, manifesting in every word and glance and action, and every word and glance and action ingested and internalized, and it’s unfair and unjust, this sort of death
You don't talk here, but even if you did, the words would fail you, language insufficient to reflect the intense mess of being this intimate with another.

Find Another Book

Search by title or author to explore highlights from other books.

Try it with your highlights

Create your account, add your highlights and see how Screvi can change the way you read.

Get Started for Free(No credit card required)