Skip to product information
1 of 1

Swimming for England

Publisher:

Regular price $13.95
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $13.95
Sold out
"A profound meditation on toxic charity that brilliantly dissects English attitudes to refugees, revealing the darkness lurking beneath." - Jonathan TaylorWhen Faisal emerges from the English Chann...
Read More
  • 02 June 2026
View Product Details

"A profound meditation on toxic charity that brilliantly dissects English attitudes to refugees, revealing the darkness lurking beneath." - Jonathan Taylor

When Faisal emerges from the English Channel after his record-breaking swim from France, Brian and Eileen Pratchett expect gratitude—after all, they rescued him from the refugee pool, fed him, trained him, transformed him. But Cameron, a young Scottish drifter, has come searching for his brother Malcolm, one of the Pratchetts' earlier 'projects.' Malcolm was going to be a tennis champion. Instead, he disappeared.

As Cameron's questions grow more pointed and Faisal's gratitude turns ambiguous, the Pratchetts' carefully maintained facade begins to crack. Behind their respectable seafront home with its immaculate rose garden lies a darker story—one of control, obsession, and the terrible price of failing to meet expectations.

Swimming for England is a masterful psychological portrait that operates simultaneously as thriller, social satire, and searing indictment. Goodman's prose is both beautiful and brutal, his imagery visceral, his characters rendered with uncomfortable intimacy. This is fiction that disturbs, provokes, and lingers—perfect for book clubs seeking compact, challenging material and readers who appreciate the intersection of literary ambition and page-turning suspense.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $13.95
Pages: 100
Publisher: Barbican Press
Imprint: Barbican Press
Publication Date: 02 June 2026
Trim Size: 8.00 X 5.00 in
ISBN: 9781917352123
Format: Paperback
BISACs: FICTION / LGBTQ+ / Gay, Crime and / or mystery fiction, FICTION / Thrillers / Crime, FICTION / World Literature / England / 21st Century, Street fiction / urban fiction
REVIEWS Icon
"This is a profound meditation on toxic charity, and apparent liberalism. Part realist, part absurdist (a la Beckett's "Happy Days"), part allegory, part savage (and, by the end, shocking) satire, the novel brilliantly dissects prevailing English (and it is specifically English) attitudes to refugees, the homeless, the young, revealing the darkness lurking beneath. If all this sounds deadly serious, it is - but there is also immense humour here (again, like Beckett) and weird twists and turns on every page. The whole novella consists of one scene, and it is as tightly structured and intense as a one-act play. I loved it." - Jonathan Taylor