
Normandy: The Scenery & Romance of Its Ancient Towns, Complete
Gordon Home's 1920s travelogue is a love letter to Normandy in its most evocative form. Written before the region was scarred by war, before tourism stripped its villages of mystery, this book captures a France that exists now only in memory and these pages. Home guides readers through cobblestone streets where gothic spires pierce the evening sky, past half-timbered houses weathered by centuries, through market squares where the rhythm of life has changed little since the Normans sailed for England. His prose renders the landscape not as a series of sights to check off, but as a living tapestry where every stone whispers of conquest and craft, of William the Bastard and the builders who raised cathedrals to heaven. This is travel writing for the dreamer, for the reader who wants to wander not just a region but a state of mind, one where the past feels as present as the cobbles beneath your feet.













