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Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Sea Child by Linda Wilgus - a dramatic adventure in Cornwall

In this captivating historical novel, a grieving widow is drawn back to Cornwall, the location of her earliest memories, where she expects a quiet life but is drawn into friendship with a gang of smugglers. Impoverished after her naval husband’s death and unexpectedly touched by scandal, Isabel Henley flees London for a rustic cottage in Helston after her husband dies at Trafalgar on the HMS Neptune, leaving nothing but debts. 
She has never lived without servants and does not even know how to light a fire to make tea but, luckily, her landlady is sympathetic and imparts some basic housekeeping skills. As importantly, Mrs. Dowling witnessed her arrival in Helston as a child, nearly twenty years earlier. Isabel knows she was adopted by Admiral and Mrs. Farnworth but she has never heard the story from a witness:
“I saw you that day,” Mrs. Dowling says. “I saw you when you first came out. I was standing at the window and I saw you come up the road. You were barefoot and very small. Small for your age – that’s what we all said later; the girl was small for her age. You wore only a shift, though they say it was of the finest cotton. Your hair was darker than it is now.”

She goes on to explain that some locals believe Isabel was brought by the legendary Sea Bucca, a merman “with the skin of conger eel and seaweed for hair . . . . Some say you are his daughter.”
Isabel finds this superstition unnerving but perhaps it does explain her fascination with the sea. Her new life is solitary but she appreciates the proximity to the sea; at least, until she is warned by an officious lieutenant from the Revenue Service that there are dangerous smugglers nearby. He tells her proudly if he catches anyone smuggling, he won’t wait for a trial but will hang them as traitors. Isabel finds him repellent but she’s certainly not on the side of the smugglers – until the captain of the local smugglers is wounded and brought to her cottage in the middle of the night. This is what happens when you rent a cottage without a lock!

The beauty of the Cornish coast captivates both Isabel and the reader, and we both know she should stay quietly in her cottage and not allow herself to befriend a smuggler. However, part of Isabel’s appeal is her sense of adventure and her determination not to be constrained by other people’s expectations. Wilgus has created an intrepid character in Isabel, capable of friendship with the low and the mighty as she tries to rebuild her life. The story is dramatic and very satisfying.
This is my third book for the Intrepid Reader’s 2026 Historical Fiction Challenge. It’s one of the historical novels of 2026 I was eager to read and it was even better than anticipated! I can’t decide if it is meant as an homage to du Maurier’s Frenchman’s Creek or whether it is simply impossible to write about smugglers in Cornwall without conjuring echoes of that book. I look forward to discussing this question with others who have read both.

Title: The Sea Child
Author: Linda Wilgus
Publication: Ballantine Books, hardcover, 2026
Genre: Historical Fiction
Setting: 19th century
Source: Library

7 comments:

  1. You make this sound appealing ... and it has a great setting too. Wondering if she becomes a smuggler too? I think I will add it and see if it's at the library.

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    1. It's also fun to read about dramatic action on the sea when one is cozy and warm inside (although in my house that requires a space heater).

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  2. This reminds me of the kind of novel I enjoyed reading a long time ago. Smugglers/pirates, a heroine to keep things glued together, and a coastline setting that is just made for this kind of story. I’m going to look for this one.

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    1. It's hard to do this sort of book without a lot of anachronisms but I think it was well done. And definitely a strong sense of place - you can almost feel the splash of the waves!

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  3. Frenchman's Creek is one of my all time favourite books, my romantic soul adored that book as a teenager. I've read it a couple of times since but not in a while. I've grabbed The Sea Child for my Kindle and will read it as soon as I can.

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  4. I wondered where it ranked with you, Cath, because I think we discussed several of her other books but not Frenchman's Creek. I don't think I've reread it since I was a teen but just checked and I do own a paperback . . . .

    My sister and niece are in Bath today and I am jealous that I am merely going to boring meetings and working on a grant.

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  5. Sounds like such a fun book. And I think you are right about Cornwall and smuggler stories! Honestly, Frenchman's Creek is one of the few DMM novels that I didn't care for. I had to go back and read my post from 2013 to remember exactly why: https://janegs.blogspot.com/2013/06/frenchmans-creek.html

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