Travel poetry in plain clothes: a wife’s warm, wry reflections on ordinary holidays.
This collection, drawn from letters and essays, follows a woman and her husband as they seek refreshment in familiar places and distant landscapes. From Margate to Swiss valleys and Devon’s lanes, the journal blends humor, keen perception, and small moments of wonder, inviting readers to see travel through a curious, affectionate urban voice.
Across chapters and sketches, the book captures the mood of 19th‑century leisure travel: practical choices, family life, and the surprising pleasures found in everyday scenes. The author’s ironies and observations rest gently on the charms and challenges of wandering with loved ones, offering a humane, lightly ironic counterpoint to grand travel narratives.
- Brightly drawn portraits of travel companions and locals, with a steady, humorous eye on domestic life.
- Vivid scenes from Alpine passes, Tyrolean towns, and Devonshire coastlines, told with clear, accessible prose.
- Delight in small discoveries—local flavors, weather, landscapes, and the social rhythms of holiday itineraries.
- A calm but gently witty tone that welcomes readers who enjoy reflective, characterful travel writing.
Ideal for readers who love thoughtful, quietly funny travel essays grounded in real places and everyday humanity.