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==