When writer and historian Peter Wells found a cache of family letters
amongst his elderly mother's effects, he realised that he had the means
of retracing the history of a not-untypical family swept out to New
Zealand during the great nineteenth-century human diaspora from Britain.
His family experienced the war against Te Kooti, the Boer War, the
Napier earthquake of 1931 and the Depression. They rose from servant
status to the comforts of the middle class. There was army desertion,
suicide, adultery, AIDS, secrets and lies. There was also success,
prosperity and social status. In digging deep into their stories,
examining letters from the past and writing a letter to the future,
Peter Wells constructs a novel and striking way to view the history of
Pakeha New Zealanders.