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Written primarily by Daisy Phillips, with a few by her husband Jack, to her family in England, these letters describe the creation of a shortlived English home in the Windermere Valley of southwestern British Columbia. Not given to introspection, Daisy registers her immediate and frank reactions to her new environment and startling new way of life. From her letters we learn of the experiences of the Phillips and their neighbours in settling the newly opened land and of their attempts to grow fruit in an area with limited agricultural potential.
R. Cole Harris is a professor in the geography department at the University of British Columbia. Elizabeth Phillips, daughter of Daisy and Jack, was born in Windermere and lives in England.
One of the many values of Letters from Windermere is the light they shed on the experiences of a middle-class woman emigrant .... The letters will be a gold mine for those interested in the domestic taste of the period.
This poignant tale of thwarted hope has been transformed into a most attractive book ... It is a very interesting individual story, and a valuable set of primary documents well supported by R. Cole Harris’s helpful introduction.
As for the letters themselves, they are, quite simply, splendid. Thanks to Daisy's penchant for detail we are treated to a day-to-day account of the lives of these expatriate gentlefolk. We learn what they ate, what they wore, what they read ... We begin to see how they thought and how they viewed their world. Altogether, Letters from Windermere has an intimacy and immediacy that sets it above the usual ruck of immigrants' memoirs.
This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.