Several bloggers have been reading Benjamin Wood’s Booker Prize longlisted novella Seascraper for Novellas in November after our co-hosts Cathy and Rebecca named it their ‘buddy read’ for the month. I hadn’t decided whether to read it myself but when I discovered that it’s also going to be the starting point for Six Degrees of Separation in December, that helped me make up my mind!
Seascraper is set in an unspecified time period, which I managed to identify as the early 1960s (there are some references to Lawrence of Arabia, which was released in 1962). However, it feels much earlier than that due to the protagonist leading a life largely free of technology and doing a job that was done by his grandfather before him. His name is Thomas Flett and he’s a twenty-year-old man living with his mother in the fictional town of Longferry on the North West coast of England. Thomas has taught himself to play the guitar and dreams of becoming a folk singer, but that seems unlikely to happen because he and his mother rely on the money he makes through his work as a shanker, someone who catches shrimp by scraping the sand at low tide.
Thomas comes home one day to find his mother with a stranger, a man who introduces himself as the American director Edgar Acheson. Edgar is planning to make a new film with the Longferry beach as its setting and he offers to pay Thomas to guide him around the coastline, looking for suitable filming locations. Thomas accepts, as the money is too good to turn down, but when he and Edgar head out to the sea something happens which sets his life on a new course.
This is a quiet, simple story but also a powerful and atmospheric one. The author devotes a lot of time to describing the small, mundane details of Thomas’s daily routines, such as how he prepares his horse and cart for his early mornings shrimp fishing on the beach, so when Edgar Acheson arrives there’s a real sense of something momentous happening. The whole story takes place over a period of less than two days, but the events of those two days change everything for Thomas. Previously his whole world has revolved largely around his mother, who became pregnant with him at fifteen and has been shunned by the community as a result, but his new friendship with Edgar and an unexpected encounter with another person makes him reconsider what he really wants to do with his life.
Seascraper is a beautifully written novella and the coastal setting, with fog hanging over the sea and treacherous sinkpits in the sand, is vividly described. There’s a development later in the book that I would love to talk about, but I can’t really say any more about the plot without spoiling it. I wasn’t sure about this development at first, as it sent things in a direction I wasn’t anticipating, but now that I’ve finished I think it was the perfect way to move Thomas’s story forward. I’m so impressed by this book overall, particularly as it’s not one I was planning to read and I didn’t expect to enjoy it as much as I did.

I’m tempted by this one. I know Cathy really liked it too. It obviously has an intriguing plot twist.
Yes, I think it’s the sort of twist people will either love or hate. It worked for me and I really enjoyed the book overall.
You’ve persuaded me. I’ve added it 🙂
I’m so glad you enjoyed this, I thought it was lovely. Thanks for joining in with our Buddy Read.
I probably wouldn’t have read this if you hadn’t chosen it for your Buddy Read, so thank you!
I’ve just finished this too, very unexpected indeed!
I don’t think any of us were expecting it to go in that direction!
I liked it, too.
I’m glad I read it!
I love when books end up being better than you hoped or expected.
Yes, that’s always a nice surprise!
All the reviews of this make it sound very tempting – including yours!
I don’t always get on with Booker nominees, but I really enjoyed this one and found it very readable!
Hm… looks like I don’t fully agree with you on this one. My review should go up on Friday, so…
I liked it, but it does go in an unexpected direction and I can see why it wouldn’t work for everyone!
Good to know ho much you liked this. It is ready for me I’m still sitting on the unread book. Sigh.
I hope you like it too. It’s a quick read and beautifully written.