Word on the Water: A Floating World of Books

JENNIFER RAJASEKAR, who is a full-time international student from India on our MA Creative Writing, tells us about one of her favourite places in England.

I have always believed that bookshops hold stories long before we even open a book. Yet nothing prepared me for the moment I discovered a bookshop that quite literally floats on water.

Word on the Water, often affectionately called ‘The London Bookbarge’ is one of the most unusual and beloved independent bookshops in the UK. Housed inside a historic canal boat, it is not simply a place to purchase books, but a living literary space where reading, music, and community really do seem to coexist. The moment I heard about it, I knew I wanted to experience it – not just as a visitor, but as a reader stepping into a story. As someone who studies literature and spends much of her time surrounded by texts and ideas, the thought of a bookshop on water felt almost poetic, like a metaphor made real.

The shop is permanently moored along the peaceful towpath of Regent’s Canal, a short walk from King’s Cross. Situated in the vibrant cultural area near Granary Square and Coal Drops Yard, the barge rests quietly on the water, offering a gentle contrast to the modern architecture and busy streets surrounding it. The address reads simply: Regent’s Canal Towpath, King’s Cross, London N1C 4LW. but it feels like a place removed from the city, a small literary sanctuary.

The vessel, known as Dianti, is a Dutch canal barge built in the 1920s, and had a busy working life long before it eventually found a second life as a travelling bookshop in 2011. Then, for several years, the bookshop had to move every two weeks due to canal regulations. Customers would return to visit, only to find the shop had gone somewhere else. Financial struggles and uncertainty became constant challenges.

In 2015, after public petitions and widespread community support, the shop was finally granted a permanent mooring in its present location. That transformed its future.

My first glimpse of the boat felt like spotting a scene from a storybook: the barge appeared both modest and enchanting. Its painted exterior carried the slightly weathered charm of something well-loved, the bold lettering of its name, Word on the Water, announcing its identity with quiet confidence. It did not look like a conventional shop. It looked like an invitation.

Before embarking, I lingered outside. Books were arranged along the exterior railings in neat, inviting rows, their colourful spines catching the light. It felt less like a commercial display and more like an open conversation between readers. Near the entrance, I noticed the booksellers themselves – warm, approachable people who seemed genuinely delighted to talk about literature.. Beside the boat, a small souvenir section displayed postcards and literary keepsakes.

And then there was the dog, resting near the entrance, quietly observing me as I stepped aboard. Around the boat, green leaves spilled gently from pots, and delicate fairy lights were strung along the railings. I had crossed a threshold into a different world. For a moment, I simply stood there, absorbing the atmosphere, the gentle rocking of the boat, the soft rustle of pages turning, the sense of being surrounded by stories.

From the entrance, a narrow set of steps led into the main interior of the barge. As I carefully made my way down, the space opened into a hall of bookshelves. These are made from reclaimed wood, I learned, and they giving the interior an old, rustic aesthetic.

Barges aren’t big, and books filled every possible surface, stacked vertically and horizontally. The collection was remarkably diverse: classics, contemporary fiction, poetry, children’s books, non-fiction on art, politics, and culture.

What struck me most about the interior, however, was its atmosphere. Old armchairs invited me to sit and stay awhile. Old carpets covered the wooden floor, adding warmth and texture. A vintage typewriter rested on a shelf, its keys slightly worn, perhaps from having once been used to compose stories. Nearby, I noticed other small relics of the past: an old telephone, decorative ornaments, and carefully placed curiosities that gave the boat the feeling of a miniature museum. The lighting was soft and warm. Every detail contributed to a sense of nostalgia. Time seemed to move – and seemed to have moved – a little slower here.

Eventually, I made my way back toward the upper deck. This part of the boat serves as a small performance space, and contains an open-air stage, on which musicians sometimes perform, writers gather for readings and discussions, and poets share their work at open-mic sessions. Even on this quiet day, it seemed to carry the energy of past performances.  The whole thing felt less like a shop than a community hub where art is shared freely and literature becomes a social experience rather than a solitary one.

Before stepping away, I returned to the small souvenir section and chose a simple card to take with me. It was not an expensive purchase, not a grand object, but it felt meaningful, a tangible reminder of the afternoon I spent in that floating world of words.

FRIENDS FOR LIFE AT NTU: FORTY-SOMETHINGS CAN HAVE SOCIAL LIVES TOO!

Claire Suzanne and Laura De Vivo met when they started the BA Creative Writing at NTU in 2022. Here, they reflect on joining the course, and on an enduring friendship.

Claire and Laura, arms around one another, looking at the camera. Laura wears a Nottingham Forest shirt, and Claire holds a Notts County certificate.
Laura (left) and Claire (right). Both are Premier League, in our opinion.

It was Open Day, January 2022. I remember it well, squinting in the sun as I pulled into the Clifton Campus car park for the first time.

I’d driven twenty miles to get there and was surprised to find the drive quite relaxing. I turned off my trusty sat nav and followed the directions to the Pavilion building, where my first port of call awaited – a free cuppa! I browsed the vibrant pink stands, chatting to friendly staff and feeling a happy, welcoming vibe, before finding what I was really there for: the BA Creative Writing taster session.

Prospective students chatted loudly, yet the atmosphere was peaceful. It wasn’t a big lecture theatre like I had imagined at uni, a place where I would be lost in the crowd, just a number, unknown to lecturers. No, NTU seemed different, and I became increasingly hopeful that the uni I’d written off as being too far from home could be a reality for me after all.

This was confirmed when I noticed… another mature student. She was at the front, me at the back, yet we both put our hands up to ask the same question: ‘Are there many mature students on the course?’

Like me, Laura had been out of education for a long time, and we hit it off immediately. After pairing up for our poetry task, ‘I come from’, we found out we were both parents, in the same age bracket, and that we’d had a similar life experience.

Afterwards, we headed over to the refectory for another free cuppa, where we exchanged numbers. Chatting to Laura was natural, authentic – it felt like we’d known each other for years. ‘You’d better choose NTU,’ she said before she left.

Her words resonated as I sat on a bench, later on that warm winter’s day, surrounded by trees and cradling my third cuppa. I distinctly remember looking around at the clean, modern, sunlit campus and feeling content that this was it, NTU was where I wanted to be. So, I rang my husband.

‘I love it!’ I squealed down the phone.

Before I knew it, I was enrolled – I was a uni student about to embark on what I knew would be a challenging but exciting journey to my degree. Laura and I got on like a house on fire and another student, Sam, regularly joined us for lunch. Sam is twenty years younger than us, but, at uni, age doesn’t matter. Like when the campus SU venue The Point was playing 90s music and Sam laughed when I told him I had the single on cassette!

As well as for lunch, Laura and I regularly met for a pre-lecture coffee after a hectic school run. We laughed together, moaned together, shared ideas and gave feedback on each other’s work. We were similar in our determination to succeed: both perfectionists, chasing a First in every assignment and revelling in the fact that, for the first time ever, we’d both found where we wanted to be. We even shared the same interests, hitting the gym in our joint determination not to age gracefully, and we joined WRAP, the university-wide reading and writing group, where we were published and read our work to an audience – something I thought I would never do, but being with a friend made everything easier.

When I was on campus with Laura, I wasn’t just a mother, just a wife, cleaner, tidier, payer of bills. At uni I could be me, the version of me that hadn’t been through years of stress and burnout. I was young again.

Laura will graduate this summer, whereas I will stay on as a part time student. It will be strange not seeing her around campus anymore. But I know she will be successful, wherever the future takes her. And I know I have made a friend for life at uni, something I didn’t think would happen when I was a forty-year-old first year!

CLAIRE SUZANNE

I had been checking, checking and re-checking my email for weeks. What I was expecting to see was something like ‘Sorry you don’t fit the criteria for our university,’ because I am an introvert, always convinced I will lose out. And then there it was, and all I had to do was open it and I’d know. I paced my living room a few times, hands on my head, as I waited for my dream to come crashing down on top of me. I clicked the email open and instead saw a big green circle saying congratulations.

I’d done it! My foot was in the door, so now I needed to have a good look at the place. I pulled in the car park, my husband and children in the car with me, and as much as I wanted to share this with them, I needed to do it alone. I watched the car drive away, leaving me standing there.

With my heart pounding I walked in the direction of the Pavilion – my new dress, bought for the occasion, billowing in the wind. I joined the queue of young people entering the building, many with their parents, and was handed a pink NTU tote bag filled with information. I quickly found the room I needed for the Creative Writing chat, slid into an empty seat, and waited. Everyone looked so young, I thought. I must be insane.

More people sheepishly arrived and found seats at tables that were empty. Everyone seemed to look a bit nervous. Then the lecturer, Anthony Cropper, appeared in his glasses, loud shirt and big smile [editor’s note: judge for yourself here!], and I quickly warmed to him. He introduced us to a poem exercise he called ‘Where I come from’, and said it was important we paired up. I had spotted a lady behind me and asked if she might like to work with me.

That was the start of it, and soon it felt like I’d known Claire my whole life. Later that day, we shared lots of facts about ourselves, the many hats we wear and how big this dream was. We both needed practical answers and so went in hunt of lecturers to ask our multitude of similar questions.

Just as we were about to leave, I asked if she’d like to swap numbers and learnt she had other options open to her. I didn’t, and I’d found someone I already knew I didn’t want to lose. ‘Make sure you chose NTU!’, I joked.

A few days later, Claire texted, telling me she’d chosen NTU. I was ecstatic. Now I knew I could do it. On our first day we found our spot in class, our spot on the balcony, our spot in the refectory. Over the first few weeks we found that some other students migrated towards us, and us to them. Slowly, Sam became one of our little group of fast friends, and it has remained so for three years. A lecturer refers to us as the Thrilling Three, a title I’m happy to take!

Life at uni as a mature student has been made wonderful by making friends. At our induction we were told, jokingly: ‘look at the person next to you, they might be at your wedding’. I’m married, so that won’t be the case for me. But in a place where I didn’t expect to find anyone, I found people who will be me my friends for life. And that has helped to make this life-altering decision priceless.

LAURA DE VIVO