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Monday, January 26, 2026

Seascraper by Benjamin Wood

This book, longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2025, is a quiet book looking at inner life. It is a compact story that depicts two days in the life of Thomas Flett, a young man who earns his living as a shanker –which I did not know what that was, but it is a man who rides a horse and cart up and down the beach netting for shrimp. It is a hard life, and it has taken its toll. At just twenty years of age, he looks and acts like a man who is considerably older. His bones ache, his mind aches, and he shambles. And while he more or less accepts his lot, there is more than a small part of him that yearns for something more, something better. He has dreams, small managable dreams that seem attainable to the reader and yet we lose hope that he will take the plunge. This is an insight into this sort of poverty and the toll it can take on your spirit. It doesn't make Thomas mean, but you could see where that would happen, and it is certainly happening in the 21st century, where there is no chance of a better life and the blame is sorely misplaced. This is a look inside a psyche and it is a quiet one at that.

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