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Trawl

Trawl is the third novel by the experimental British novelist B. S. Johnson. Published by Secker & Warburg in 1966, the book is an autobiographical novel based on a trip Johnson took on a fishing trawler to the Barents Sea. Although reviews of the novel were mixed, in 1967 Trawl was joint-winner of the Somerset Maugham Award.

Plot
Trawl follows an unnamed narrator who takes a three-week journey on a fishing trawler to the Barents Sea. As well as observing the activities carried out by the crew, the narrator also looks back at his life, metaphorically "trawling" through his past. This includes recounting past love interests and his childhood as a wartime evacuee. ==Style==
Style
Trawl was described by Johnson as: "all interior monologue". The book features an absence of paragraphs, while the length of lines in the book is shortened, thus the book is printed in a long, narrow format. When Johnson presented the work to Fredric Warburg of publishers Secker & Warburg, Warburg believed the work to be an autobiography rather than a novel. Johnson denied this, saying in response: "It is a novel, I insisted and could prove; what it is not is fiction." ==Reception==
Reception
Reviews for Trawl were mixed. Positively, The Guardian said that Johnson had grown up as a writer, The Times found the book, "both entertaining and artistically satisfying", and the Evening Standard praised Johnson's courage as a narrator. However, Montague Haltrecht in The Sunday Times commented that Johnson was a sentimentalist, Hilary Corke complained about the symbolism of the narrator trawling through their memories, and Martin Seymour-Smith wrote of Trawl: "the effect is one of Dorothy Richardson writing about merchant seamen." In 1967, Trawl was joint-winner of the Somerset Maugham Award, given to writers to enrich their work through experience of foreign countries. He co-won with Andrew Sinclair's The Better Half. Johnson won £500, on condition that the money should be spent on foreign travel. ==References==
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