Press ClippingsDocuments
|
For travellers, virtual and actual, The Sea Captain's Wife offers a fine and variegated journey: back in time (to the 1860s) and around the world on a merchant sailing ship.
Azuba Galloway Bradstock, the book's protagonist, born and raised in coastal New Brunswick, within sight, sound and scent of the sea, loves her town but yearns to see and know the wider world.
Click here to read the full review on the Globe and Mail
Beth Powning - At Home Here in New Brunswick
Settled in and surrounded by the inspiration of New Brunswick’s beauty – Beth Powning lives, breaths and creates. Be it through the lense of her camera or her words on paper Powning has found the perfect muse…home
Click here to read the full article on Sea and be Scene.
Or use the download link below for a PDF.
TheCommentary.ca
I am Planta: On the Line. This is THECOMMENTARY.CA.
The Sea Captain’s Wife is a new book from Beth Powning. It’s described as a gripping novel of love and obsession set on the high seas of the 1860’s. It takes us from the Bay of Fundy, where Azuba Galloway was born and where she often dreams of seeing the world. She marries a captain, but she can’t see the world as she’d like. Beth Powning is the author of The Hatbox Letters, Edge Seasons, and Shadow Child.
Click here to read the post on thecommentary.ca
A coincidental read? Verily I think not
Sometimes, I see life as a giant connect-the-dot puzzle, our seemingly random conversations solid enough on their own, but much more interesting when they are connected line by line, giving us a bigger picture, a grander narrative.
This is such a story. It begins with a conversation and ends with a whole book.
About a month ago, I was in a Toronto meeting that was interrupted by one of the few things that can truly derail a business agenda -- death.
In this case, the death of an infant; a still-born child.
Click here to read the full article on the Times and Transcript
Artists’ retreat Creative couple lives in quiet comfort
New Brunswick author Beth Powning was born into a literary world. Her grandfather, a professor of Victorian Literature at Brown University, always read poetry at family gatherings. There were a number of famous authors in her small New England town. Some were family friends. The young Powning would have tea with children’s book author Esther Bates.
Click here to read the full article on the Toronto Star
The Sea Captain's Daughter: One who refused to stay ashore
It's highbrow Harlequin meets high-seas adventure. Powning gussies up both forms: Rather than typical "boy-meet girl" romance, her love story anatomizes a struggling young marriage; rather than a salty sailor, this ocean epic recounts the escapades of a sea-faring wife.
Click Here to read the full article on the Toronto Star
Fast tale sails with prose
Readers will find a streak of the poetic in all of Beth Powning's work, including her new novel, The Sea Captain's Wife. As in her two wonderfully wrought memoirs, Edge Seasons and Shadow Child and in her widely lauded first novel, The Hatbox Letters, the New Brunswick writer proves a master of descriptive dexterity. Her keen eye for landscape and for detail give her work a rewarding resonance.
Click here to read the full article on the London Free Press
An independent woman at sea in the 19th century
The daughter of a ship builder, Azuba Galloway grows up in a small town on the Bay of Fundy watching ships go out to sea. Studying the captains as they lead their wives and children on board, she fantasizes about their endless adventures in foreign ports.
Some day, the young Azuba tells herself, that will be me, sailing around the world with my husband and family. When she falls in love, at 19, it's with 28-year-old Nathaniel Bradstock, the youngest of three sea-captain brothers. Nathaniel shares Azuba's dream of a shipboard marriage. That is, he does until he sees his wedding present from his new father-in-law: a veritable palace where Azuba can live comfortably with a houseful of children while her husband is tending to his trade.
Click here to read full article on the Edmonton Journal
Character longs for the sea
YOU MIGHT NEVER guess that Sussex, N.B.-based writer and photographer Beth Powning was originally "from away."
Charming, genuine and forthright, the author of such critically acclaimed works as Shadow Child, Edge Seasons and The Hatbox Letters is quick with a colourful Maritimes anecdote when we meet for drinks at a Halifax hotel.
Click here to read full article on the Chronicle Herald.
Sea-faring novel gets Maritime christening
New Brunswick's storied age of sail came alive Jan. 15 at the Sussex Legion as Beth Powning launched her new historical novel, The Sea Captain's Wife. More than 500 people attended, enjoying chowder, historical displays and nautical art that complemented the reading and book signing. The author, family and friends even donned period dress for an extra element of authenticity. Ahoy!
Click here to view article on the Telegraph Journal

Press Clippings