Boater: A Life on England’s Waterways
Jo Bell
304 pages
Paperback
Harper Collins
2025
ISBN: 9780008716295
Review
‘[The greatest difference between boat-life and non-boat life]…is not the sense of place, but the sense of time.’
Disclaimer: I love canals. They are a throwback to a bygone era of industry, but also one of the few places in cities where there is genuine peace. The world of the narrowboat is one of exquisite aesthetics – the eddies around opening lock gates, the sudden splash from a bank, the morning skeins of mist over the still water. I was always likely to be a sucker for Jo Bell’s book, and so it proved.
I think that Bell is able to bring about appreciation of these aesthetics because she is not a canal native. Formerly an industrial archaeologist and now a poet, she takes us on a journey encompassing her first faltering tweaks of the tiller and through many of the UK’s four-thousand miles of canal. On her narrowboat ‘Tinker’, we use her native landlubber eye to explore the quirks, peacefulness, and etiquette of life on a narrowboat (NOT a barge, she is careful to point out early in the book).Bell’s ear for cadence is apparent; much of the language is lyrical and has a lovely soft sense of humour running through it.
Occasionally I found myself drawn out of a lilting sense of narrative – there is an undercurrent of sneering at holiday canallers and rookie mistakes. Admittedly, this might have been guilt at having made some of these mistakes myself. I thought the book was weakest when there is an effort to manufacture elements of jeopardy. An extended anecdote about almost leaving the boat grounded on the sill of a lock, the resulting repairs, and a (admittedly entertaining) breakdown in the middle of a long, dark canal tunnel have the feeling of an editor asking for more peril, but these are minor quibbles and do not detract from a warm, comforting book.
Bell is at her strongest when she allows us to explore the elegiac, frozen waterways in winter, or when we see her retreating to her cosy narrowboat as she deals with the breakup of a relationship. She creates a sense of a friendly canal community and leads us through an exploration of the underground geography associated with canals – mercifully free of junction at road numbers and based instead around pub names.
The is a wonderful autumnal read.
*Thanks for reading. Image courtesy of ‘A Writer’s Life’. Find my other reviews below*
Wilkie Collins – The Woman in White
Kevin Barry – The Heart in Winter
George Mackay Brown – A Time to Keep
Robert Winder – Bloody Foreigners
P. G. Wodehouse – Very Good, Jeeves
Michael Palin – Erebus: The History of a Ship
Hilary Mantel – The Mirror and the Light
Samantha Harvey – The Western Wind
Diarmaid MacCulloch – Thomas Cromwell: A Life
Peter Carey – A Long Way from Home
Val McDermid – A Place of Execution
Richard Cohen – How to Write Like Tolstoy
John Sampson – The Wind on the Heath
Jess Smith – Way of the Wanderers
Max Hastings – Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy 1945-1975
Bernard MacLaverty – Grace Notes
Ernest Hemingway – In Our Time
Andrew Roberts – Napoleon the Great
Emily Bronte – Wuthering Heights
Margaret Atwood – The Handmaid’s Tale
Annie Proulx – Brokeback Mountain
Anthony Doerr – All the Light We Cannot See
Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird
Colson Whitehead – The Underground Railroad
Amor Towles – A Gentleman in Moscow
Matthew Richardson is a writer of short stories. His work has featured in Gold Dust magazine, Literally Stories, Close to the Bone, McStorytellers, Penny Shorts, Soft Cartel, Whatever Keeps the Lights On, Flashback Fiction, Cafelit, Best MicroFiction 2021, Writer’s Egg, Idle Ink, The Wild Word, Down in the Dirt, and Shooter magazine. He has a Professional Doctorate in Education. Matthew blogs at www.matthewjrichardson.com.

Well, that sounds like a good book! Particularly because I’ve been on narrowboats many times when living in the UK. Hmm, I know what they say about holiday narrowboats too – not all bad for us. Also, that smell on canals, especially on the locks – one whiff and I’m there.
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Haha I’m the same Chris!
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Very interesting, Matthew. I enjoyed reading about your enjoyment of canals as well as the pleasure you derived from the book. And I had no idea that the UK has 4,000 miles of canals!
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Thanks Annie – some of my favourite holidays as a child!
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I like canals and your review; thanks Matthew, will give this a look-in 🙂
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Thanks John – much appreciated as always.
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