About Daniella

I am a New Zealand cultural anthropologist, adventurer and travel author living in France. My writing comes from deep immersion usually through work or volunteer experiences. I investigate and write about social movements, social history, music, counter-culture, community and utopic ideas.

I am fascinated by people’s life stories and how they are shaped and reflect larger social, historic and economic processes in our interlinked world.

Full bio

My travels started early; I was born in Kenya, grew up among Shona people in Zimbabwe where my parents were teaching, and later among Pakeha and Maori in New Zealand where my parents had a small farm.

Walking with buffalo, Zimbabwe

Strange post-empire education in Zimbabwe

Planting broccoli with geriatric tractor, New Zealand

I studied anthropology, ecology and French and then later a Masters in agricultural development, and set off to work and live around the world. Many ecclectic jobs, studies, volunteer stints and passions have informed my writing.

Cycling through the Spiny desert in Madagascar with a guitar for conservation work.

Managing an environmental NGO with Comorian women for conservation, Comoros Islands

Researching migration in Nepal.

Working on a New Zealand farm

Interviewing farmers in France.

Storytelling at festivals in France.

Studying wine in France.

In 2014, after long periods in the Indian Ocean, New Zealand and Nepal, I arrived in France, joined a shared flat with my boyfriend and seven other young French people and inadvertently set out to explore the alternative sides of France, which I recount in a book : ‘What makes your heart sing?’

My writing has been published in:

Inspirations for my writing

George Orwell’s accounts of Paris and London,

Joan Didion’s essays on America and Gloria Steinem’s stories from the road,

Laurie Lee’s and Nicolas Bouvier’s poetry and joie de vivre,

Nellie Bly’s daring investigative journalism.