![]() Her father was the son of Ronald Tree and a member of a well connected Anglo-American family active in politics and public life on both sides of the Atlantic in the late 19th and first half of the 20th centuries. She married Sir Charles Burrell and lives at Knepp Castle in West Sussex. ![]() Her work has also appeared in Reader's Digest Today's Best Non-Fiction, Rough Guides Women Travel and The Best American Travel Writing. As of 2016 she writes for the Sunday Times, Evening Standard, Observer, History Today and Condé Nast Traveller. In 1999 she was Overall Winner of the Travelex Travel Writers’ Awards for a feature on Nepal's Kumaris, or 'Living Goddesses' -‘High and Mighty’- for the Sunday Times. She read Classics at University, following the advice of author Iris Murdoch.įrom 1993 to 1995, Tree was, a travel correspondent at the Evening Standard. She was adopted by an aristocratic British family as a baby. ![]() The 3,500 acres (1,400 ha) wildland project was created in the grounds of Knepp Castle, the ancestral home of her husband, Sir Charles Burrell, a landowner and conservationist. She is author of the Richard Jefferies Society Literature Award-winning book Wilding: the return of nature to a British farm that describes the creation of Knepp Wildland, the first large-scale rewilding project in lowland England. Isabella Tree, Lady Burrell (born 1964) is a British author and travel journalist. ![]()
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