Daphne du Maurier was accompanied in her search by her son, Christian, who has taken the photographs. He was brought up in Cornwall and shares his mother’s intuitive sense of the dramatic. Together they visited all the scenes described in the book, and page by page the superb photographs follow and illuminate the text. Drawn on by Daphne du Maurier's vivid, highly individual prose, by the magic which lights up all her books, and by the lovely illustrations, the traveller to Cornwall, and the reader who does not stir from his chair, may wander in truth or fancy from the Tamar to Land's End - along the coasts, across the moors, avoiding the tourist centers in the tourist season (for then disillusion breaks in, the atmosphere is lost, the vision shatters). before the hot dog stand and the cheap motel destroy the romantic heritage of Cornwall, Daphne du Maurier would leave us this exquisite portrait of a wild and beautiful land.
Vanishing CornwallDaphne du Maurier
Mornings in FlorenceJohn Ruskin
Mornings in FlorenceEmbajada a TamorlánRuy González de Clavijo
Embajada a TamorlánLab 257Michael C. Carroll
Lab 257Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondoAntonio Pigafetta
Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondoA Traveler at FortyWilliam J. Glackens
A Traveler at FortyThe Hare With Amber Eyes A Hidden InheritanceMichael Maloney
The Hare With Amber Eyes A Hidden InheritanceByronHarold Nicolson
ByronThe Worst Journey in the WorldApsley Cherry-Garrard
The Worst Journey in the WorldA Russian journalJohn Steinbeck
A Russian journalDeath Valley in '49William Lewis Manly
Death Valley in '49The Everglades: river of grassMarjory Stoneman Douglas
The Everglades: river of grassLost City of the IncasHiram Bingham
Lost City of the Incas