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Strangerland: A Family at War by Helena…
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Strangerland: A Family at War (edition 2006)

by Helena Drysdale

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"In 1834, twenty-four-year-old Isabella Campbell left England for India, and within two weeks of joining her brother in Bengal had married his best friend. A dashing cavalry officer in the East India Company, Charles Gascoyne swept his young wife on a tour of garrisons, hill stations and vast military cavalcades, to battlefields and beyond." "But after the birth of her ninth baby, Isabella fell ill, and Charles insisted the family should leave India. Not rich enough to buy land back Home, instead he persuaded her they should embark on a new life a pioneers in a nascent British colony on the other side of the world: New Zealand." "For the sake of her health, Isabella was sent back to England, while Charles went ahead with the children and their governess. When Isabella joined them a year later she found that far from being welcomed, the governess had taken over both the household and Charles's heart. Buried in the bush, they were soon mired in scandal and a power struggle that would tear the family apart." "While battle clouds massed over the Gascoyne family, so New Zealand itself disintegrated into war as British settlers fought the native Maori - and very nearly lost. For Isabella the public became personal when her son Fred was caught up in a massacre perpetrated by a notorious Maori warrior-prophet. When the Gascoynes were joined by their nephew Bamber, more terror lay in store." "Now, a hundred and fifty years on, Helena Drysdale has uncovered a collection of surviving documents and woven together the facts and fabric of her cousins' lives to create a map of one family's journey. This romantic and ultimately tragic tale, set against the little-known turmoil of the Maori Wars (now known as the New Zealand Land Wars), traverses oceans and continents to touch three corners of the empire at the moment that empire was taking shape. Strangerland, a true story, spans two generations while illuminating the story of their times."--BOOK JACKET.… (more)
Member:primlil
Title:Strangerland: A Family at War
Authors:Helena Drysdale
Info:Picador (2006), Edition: First Edition, First Printing, Hardcover, 356 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:Biography, India, New Zealand, Women

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Strangerland: A Family at War by Helena Drysdale

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An unusually well documented hybrid of family history and novel, based on the colonial lives of members of the Gascoyne family in 19th century India and subsequently in New Zealand. The Gascoynes had aristocratic connections without wealth and in consequence, the Gascoyne men naturally gravitated to military employment where they played a significant role in the colonial wars of India and New Zealand. Major Charles Gascoyne, the primary figure in the chronicle, distinguished himself in the Indian wars before settling in New Zealand with his wife Isabella and their children. Their son, Frederick, had a chequered career in the New Zealand militia during the Land Wars. Drysdale, who is a Gascoyne descendant had the benefit, after prolonged research, of extensive family correspondence and memoirs, in addition to the usual resources of public records and newspapers. Strangerland is absorbing for anyone who has an interest in 19th century colonial history. The prose style is variable, occasionally eloquent, and the chronology occasionally jumpy, a consequence probably of the wealth of resources available to Drysdale. She has the family historian's penchant for namedropping, leaving no aristocratic connection unmentioned, with occasionally ludicrous effect. When Isabella returned to England on the Broxbournebury, under the command of Captain Chapman, Drysdale records that she found him to be a perfect gentleman, one of the most charming men she ever met. Moreover, as if that were not sufficient recommendation, his wife Caroline was sister to the 'famous Sir William McNaghten...who would later propel the British into the First Afghan War, which saw so many of Isabella's friends slaughtered - including Sir William himself.' Isabella's sister in law Emily Campbell, widowed in Capetown, is the subject of a wonderfully laconic footnote before disappearing from the chronicle: she 'later married a son of Lord Egremont, but he spent all her money and was killed falling from a balloon into a lake in Bengal'. ( )
  Pauntley | Nov 15, 2017 |
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"In 1834, twenty-four-year-old Isabella Campbell left England for India, and within two weeks of joining her brother in Bengal had married his best friend. A dashing cavalry officer in the East India Company, Charles Gascoyne swept his young wife on a tour of garrisons, hill stations and vast military cavalcades, to battlefields and beyond." "But after the birth of her ninth baby, Isabella fell ill, and Charles insisted the family should leave India. Not rich enough to buy land back Home, instead he persuaded her they should embark on a new life a pioneers in a nascent British colony on the other side of the world: New Zealand." "For the sake of her health, Isabella was sent back to England, while Charles went ahead with the children and their governess. When Isabella joined them a year later she found that far from being welcomed, the governess had taken over both the household and Charles's heart. Buried in the bush, they were soon mired in scandal and a power struggle that would tear the family apart." "While battle clouds massed over the Gascoyne family, so New Zealand itself disintegrated into war as British settlers fought the native Maori - and very nearly lost. For Isabella the public became personal when her son Fred was caught up in a massacre perpetrated by a notorious Maori warrior-prophet. When the Gascoynes were joined by their nephew Bamber, more terror lay in store." "Now, a hundred and fifty years on, Helena Drysdale has uncovered a collection of surviving documents and woven together the facts and fabric of her cousins' lives to create a map of one family's journey. This romantic and ultimately tragic tale, set against the little-known turmoil of the Maori Wars (now known as the New Zealand Land Wars), traverses oceans and continents to touch three corners of the empire at the moment that empire was taking shape. Strangerland, a true story, spans two generations while illuminating the story of their times."--BOOK JACKET.

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