Review: Seaspray and Whisky by Norman Freeman
I went into Seaspray and Whisky with fairly low expectations, and it ended up exceeding them. What I assumed might be a dry account of routine cargo work at sea became an unexpectedly engaging story, largely because I never quite knew how it would unfold.
Freeman brings real depth to the narrative through sharp observation. His descriptions of the behaviours, attitudes, and personalities of the men around him add texture and credibility, turning what could have been an ordinary account into something quietly compelling. There’s no attempt to dramatise events or inflate their importance, which makes the story feel all the more authentic.
It’s impressive how Freeman manages to hold the reader’s interest with what is, on the surface, a single man’s experience aboard a working cargo vessel in the 20th century. The appeal lies not in adventure, but in the honesty of the telling and the insight it offers into a way of life rarely written about.