Thursday, May 28, 2026

Book Review: What The Ocean Brings by Tonya Ulynn Brown

 


*Editorial Book Review*


What The Ocean Brings
By Tonya Ulynn Brown


Publication Date: 4th June 2026
Publisher: Black Rose Writing
Pages: 346
Genre: Historical Romance

Quebec, Canada, 1847.

While trying to escape the Potato Famine, shipwrecked Irish immigrant Breanna Clarey awakens injured and alone on an unfamiliar beach. To make matters worse, she has been separated from her family, and her friend, Crow, is lying dead at her feet. But when Dawson Roberts, a reclusive fisherman with a guarded past and big dreams for his future, finds Breanna, he puts his plans on hold to offer her shelter and help find her family.

But life for an Irish immigrant isn’t easy. Facing a deadly quarantine station, dangerous immigration officials, and grief over her missing family, Breanna struggles to exert her independence and navigate her new world. While Breanna confronts an unknown future, Dawson is plagued by a painful past. They each must determine their own course, even if it means ignoring the pull they have on each other.

When the future takes an unexpected turn, only the ocean that has brought them so much devastation can help them find their way back to where they belong.




Tonya Ulynn Brown’s “What the Ocean Brings” is an emotionally absorbing work of historical fiction set against the devastating backdrop of the Irish Famine migration to Canada in 1847. Inspired by the wreck of the Carricks off the coast of Gaspé, the novel explores survival, displacement, prejudice, and emotional healing through the experiences of Breanna Clarey and Dawson Roberts. Brown approaches the period with sensitivity and restraint, allowing the emotional weight of the story to emerge naturally through the lives of her characters rather than through unnecessary sentimentality.

The novel opens with Breanna Clarey clinging to rocks after the wreck of the Carricks, injured, freezing, and traumatised by the death of her friend during the chaos of the storm. Separated from her family and stranded upon an unfamiliar coastline, Breanna is immediately placed in a position of profound uncertainty. Brown handles these early scenes particularly well, capturing not only the physical danger of the shipwreck itself, but also the emotional disorientation that follows survival. Breanna’s grief is compounded by the painful uncertainty surrounding the fate of her family, leaving her suspended between hope and mourning throughout much of the narrative

What makes Breanna such a compelling protagonist is the realism with which Brown portrays her emotional state. She is neither idealised nor unrealistically resilient. Instead, she often appears exhausted, frightened, hesitant, and emotionally overwhelmed by all she has endured. Yet despite this vulnerability, there remains a quiet determination within her that allows her to continue moving forwards even when hope seems fragile. Brown allows Breanna’s emotional recovery to unfold gradually, giving her journey an authenticity that feels deeply human.

Dawson Roberts emerges as an equally strong character. Rather than presenting him as a conventional romantic hero, Brown writes Dawson as a reserved and often uncertain man shaped by loneliness, disappointment, and responsibility. His decision to hide Breanna from the authorities after rescuing her immediately reveals both his compassion and his understanding of the dangers faced by Irish immigrants arriving in Canada during the famine years. Fear of disease hangs heavily over the novel, and Dawson knows that discovery could result in Breanna being sent into quarantine amongst desperately ill immigrants arriving from overcrowded fever ships.

The relationship between Dawson and Breanna develops with notable patience and emotional realism. Brown wisely avoids melodrama, instead allowing trust and affection to grow through shared experience, companionship, and small acts of care. Much of the emotional strength of their relationship lies in what remains unspoken. Silence, observation, and quiet gestures often carry greater emotional significance than dramatic declarations, lending their connection a sincerity that feels believable throughout.

Brown also explores Dawson’s emotional insecurities with considerable nuance. Through his former relationship with Adelais, the novel reveals how deeply Dawson has come to associate love with financial security and social expectation. Adelais’s abandonment leaves lasting scars upon him, shaping his belief that he must provide material comfort to deserve love and companionship. This belief drives many of his choices, including his willingness to continue dangerous fishing for crabs despite preferring the quieter life of farming and tending sheep. Breanna’s values stand in direct contrast to Adelais’s. Where Adelais seeks refinement, status, and comfort, Breanna values honesty, kindness, loyalty, and emotional safety. Through this contrast, Brown quietly examines differing ideas of love, stability, and fulfilment.

The wider historical realities of Irish immigration are handled thoughtfully throughout the novel. Brown addresses not only the suffering caused by famine and displacement, but also the fear and hostility Irish immigrants encountered upon arrival in Canada. The Irish are frequently treated with suspicion, viewed by many as carriers of disease and disorder. However, Brown avoids reducing these attitudes to simplistic cruelty. Instead, she portrays a society shaped by panic, fear of contagion, and social instability. This complexity allows the historical tensions within the novel to feel convincing rather than exaggerated.

Particularly effective are the scenes involving quarantine and the overwhelmed medical workers attempting to care for arriving immigrants. When Breanna and Dawson search for news of her family, they encounter a doctor struggling to cope with the sheer scale of illness and suffering surrounding the fever ships. These scenes reinforce the devastating human cost of the famine migration and provide some of the novel’s most emotionally powerful moments.

The novel also touches upon the economic realities underpinning forced emigration during the famine years. Breanna’s passage to Canada is paid for by her father’s landlord because he wishes to clear the family from the land so it may be converted for sheep grazing. Brown incorporates this historical reality naturally into the narrative, highlighting how displacement during the famine was often driven as much by economic interests as by starvation itself.

The supporting cast adds warmth and texture to the narrative. Charlie O’Connor, in particular, brings humour and energy to the story, whilst his friendship with Dawson strengthens the novel’s sense of community and loyalty. The scenes surrounding Charlie’s brutal bare-knuckle fight with King Louis introduce a rougher side to life in Gaspé, where gambling, violence, and pride exist alongside everyday survival. Although King Louis initially appears brutal and dishonourable, Brown allows brief glimpses of complexity even within smaller secondary characters, preventing them from feeling entirely one-dimensional.

Captain Boothe serves as an effective source of tension throughout the novel. As an immigration officer, he embodies the imbalance of power faced by vulnerable newcomers arriving in Canada during this period. His treatment of Breanna is unsettling precisely because it feels plausible. Brown uses his character to explore how authority can easily be abused when dealing with displaced people who possess little protection or social standing.

Rich in atmosphere and grounded in emotionally believable characters, “What the Ocean Brings” is a thoughtful and moving work of historical romance. Brown combines the harsh realities of famine migration with an ultimately hopeful exploration of resilience, belonging, and emotional healing. Through Breanna and Dawson’s journey, the novel examines not only survival, but also the fragile process of rebuilding a life after profound loss.


Review by Mary Anne Yare
The Coffee Pot Book Club


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Tonya Ulynn Brown

Tonya is a writer who loves ancient, medieval and early modern British history. She has a particular interest in anything to do with Scotland, and you will find that influences a lot of what she writes about. She enjoys writing historical fiction, and also blogs about historical figures, places and customs, mainly focusing on 16th century Europe. She's not above throwing some American history in every now and then as well. 

She holds a Master's degree in Teaching and is an elementary school teacher. Writing fills a good bit of her time when she is not at school or running her boys to a marching band event or some other activity.

Tonya lived in Minsk, Belarus when she was younger and taught English as a second language. Having even less aptitude for reading Russian than she had for speaking it, she took to looking up topics on her Encarta CD-ROM to read, since going to the library was not an option. Her topics of study? The U.S. presidents and the kings and queens of England. Tonya attributes this time of study to the  beginning of her love for British history, but she didn't realize her love for writing until many years later.


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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Celebrating Release Day of The Miller's Bride by Liz Harris #Saga #WomensFiction #NewRelease #RecommendedReading



Release Day Book Spotlight

The Miller's Bride


by Liz Harris



Publication Date: May 27th, 2026
Publisher: Boldwood Books
Pages: 318
Genre: Saga / Women's Fiction

A BRAND-NEW gripping Victorian Scottish historical saga from AWARD-WINNING author Liz Harris. 📖 Perfect for fans of Dilly Court, Rosie Goodwin and Anna Jacobs!

'A well written, authentic Victorian story set in Scotland. It is rich in detail and emotion.'
~ bestselling author Fenella J Miller

When independence comes at a price...


Scotland, 1885

Grace McLeod’s life changes overnight when her father sells the family grocer’s shop and moves the family from their Highland village to a distant fishing town. But Grace refuses to follow.

Desperate to maintain her independence, she reluctantly agrees to an arranged marriage to Angus MacKenzie – a stranger who makes it clear he doesn’t want her, and who is in love with another woman. When Grace arrives at the mill she now must call home, she finds herself entangled in a web of deceit and ambition. Unknown to her, Angus’s cousin is plotting to take over the mill and destroy her marriage from within, and he’s enlisted Angus’s former lover to help him.

As secrets and sabotage threaten to ruin everything Grace has tried to build, she must decide whether to fight for a life she never wanted – or walk away with nothing.

A sweeping, emotionally rich saga set about betrayal, resilience, and a woman brave enough to demand more.



If there’s a troubadour …

by Liz Harris

I’ve often been envious of my writer friends who set their novels in the Mediaeval era or in the Tudor age. Creating a sense of time and place seems fairly straightforward for them – just put some straw on the stone floor, a man in a tabard, a sconce on the wall and readers are transported back to the distant past.

Not so for writers setting their novels in the 1910s, 1920s and early 1930s, though. If there’s a war, they have some help. If there isn’t, it’s difficult to distance the setting from the present day as from early in the 20th century there were telephones, cars and a number of labour-saving devices familiar to us today. Technology has obviously dramatically developed since  then, and cars and telephones look very different these days, but that they existed at all at that earlier time makes the recent past feel more akin to the present than it actually is.

When I decided to write three sagas set in Scotland in the 1880s, I realised that establishing the period of those, too, would pose something of a challenge. So in order to research the novels I went to Scotland for a wonderful three weeks, visiting mills and fascinating houses that dated from the 18th and 19th centuries. It was my first time in beautiful Scotland, but it certainly won’t be my last. 

The first of the novels to be published, The Miller’s Bride, has a rural setting. It’s set in the small fictional village of Alltburn in 1885. In the story, Grace McLeod, a grocer’s daughter, agrees to marry Angus MacKenzie, the son of a miller who lives in a village some distance away from her family, a man she’s never met.


Model of Dalgarvan Mill, Ayrshire

At that time, there weren’t any cars or telephones, etc – those were the days of horses & carts and word of mouth. Skirts were longer, undergarments boned and prolific, shawls were an everyday feature of a woman’s clothing, and they did like their bonnets. The clothes, therefore, would offer some help with transporting the reader to life in the late 19th century, but it would be a limited help. Remove a boned corset and a few petticoats and you aren’t too far from what women wear today. 

As I researched the period, I came to realise that the real differences between 21st century life and life in the late 19th century weren’t captured by laced leather boots and shawls, but rather by showing how the lives of 19th century people were constrained by their environment and its expectations in a way that they aren’t today.

a woman in a shawl and a bonnet

Grace’s life was one of duty. She was expected to live according to the expectations of her family, the community and the church. Preserving her good name and that of her family would be a very real concern. The church, which I should call the kirk, and do so in the novel, didn’t just hold services on Sundays that were attended by most in the village, but it was also vigilant about behaviour in the community.

Throughout a courtship, for example, the young couple was closely watched by the kirk and the family. Where the limits of propriety and sexual behaviour were pushed beyond acceptable boundaries, the kirk could issue public rebukes, fines, and ultimately damage a person’s reputation.

One’s reputation was vital in those times, but it seems to be of less consequence today. It was easy to lose a good reputation, but very hard to win it back. In a tight-knit village, everyone knew who’d visited someone they shouldn’t. Stories spread quickly, and rumour soon became established fact. If a young woman lost her good reputation, she would find it very difficult to make a good marriage.

Domestic work would also play a large part in Grace’s life, more so than with most young people today, this being an age where labour-saving devices have made light of many a menial task. But in Grace’s time, the daily routine of her miller husband, Angus, would give structure to her day and her activities would be fashioned according to his needs.

He would have to open the sluice gates first thing in the morning to allow sufficient water into the mill stream to power the giant wheel. The butterbur leaves, which grew in profusion in the water and on the banks, could clog up the stream so they had to be pulled out every so often.

butterbur leaves

There were no mid-morning breaks in the mill. Everyone stopped working at noon for an hour and ate at that time the meal they called dinner. Each person came to work with their own dinner. Bannocks featured greatly, bread being made daily by the miller’s wife and by wives generally. Bakeries were starting to appear in villages, but where there was a mill on the edge of the village, it was less likely that there’d be a bakery there.

determining if the grain has been ground sufficiently finely

Against a background of expectations, Angus and Grace had to find their way in a marriage that neither wanted, but to which both agreed because if they hadn’t, they deemed that the situation they’d be in would be worse. Alas, as so happens in stories, unknown to Grace and Angus, there were those who for their personal gain were determined that the marriage would fail. And therein hangs the tale.




This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.



Liz Harris


Born in London, Liz Harris graduated from university with a Law degree, and then moved to California, where she led a varied life, from waitressing on Sunset Strip to working as secretary to the CEO of a large Japanese trading company.

Six years later, she returned to London and completed a degree in English, after which she taught secondary school pupils, first in Berkshire, then in Cheshire and finally in Oxfordshire.

In addition to the 29 novels she’s had published since her debut novel The Road Back, Liz has had several short stories in anthologies and magazines.

Liz lives in Windsor, in Berkshire. A member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association and the Historical Novel Society, her interests are travel, the theatre, reading and cryptic crosswords.

To find out more about Liz, visit her website at http://www.lizharrisauthor.com.