The Independent

After so long away, I now see England in a new light

Everything is simultaneo­usly familiar and strange: the landscape so incredibly green, the sky so strangely white, and the people so reticent and quiet,

- writes Holly Baxter

For the first time in 20 months, I am officially back on British shores. I flew over during the weekend on a 350-person plane that only had 66 passengers (“Welcome to your own private jet!”

said the head flight attendant as we took off) because, it turns out, Delta Island isn’t exactly a leading holiday destinatio­n for the rest of the world right now. We were delayed 20 minutes because some “special cargo” needed to be added to the hold last-minute (“Coffins,” whispered the man behind me, craning his neck out the window by the wing) and held hostage at immigratio­n for a while as each passenger showed negative Covid tests and various extraneous forms, but otherwise had a pretty smooth time of it. Even Heathrow was basically deserted as we landed on a weekend evening, two days before the travel rules for fully vaccinated US travellers officially changed. Fly during a pandemic and you get business class space at economy prices! (NB: I do not actually recommend this.)

I’m now isolating at my sister’s flat with a supply of the food I’ve missed most: salt and vinegar Chipsticks, Tetley teabags, onion bhajis, Jaffa cakes, bread without added sugar. I walked in from the airport to a care package of such British treats collated by my mum and sister, which included a home-baked Victoria sponge. I devoured it within two days – nothing comes close to a fluffy English sponge, in my opinion (and my palate is sophistica­ted enough that I’ve long declared pickled onion Monster Munch the pinnacle of culinary achievemen­t).

My mum and stepdad, double-masked, came to wave at me from outside and dropped off a package of lateral flow and PCR tests so that I can come out of isolation as soon as the laws allow. I’m still getting used to the temperatur­e, shivering in the British summer cold and forgetting that I don’t need to keep all the windows closed to stop hot air from coming in. I’ve done a lot of craning my head out the window and staring wistfully at the grey skies, the rural landscape and the tiny cars without an SUV or a pickup truck in sight. I still find it jarring when I hear passersby on the pavement below, speaking in an assortment of British accents.

When you live in New York, you spend a lot of time explaining your move by telling Americans about stale supermarke­t bagels, washout summers and Boris Johnson

I’m spending my time working my way through piles of letters that arrived for me since 2019, sorting through boxes of clothes I left in my mum’s attic around the same time, and bonding anew with my giant ragdoll cat Felix, who I left in the care of my family when I left “for three months” almost two years ago. Everything is simultaneo­usly familiar and strange: the landscape looks so incredibly green, the sky so strangely white, and the people so reticent and quiet. News programmes feel dreary and dull in comparison to their American counterpar­ts, where every few seconds someone “can’t wait to tell you this” or promises “you won’t believe what’s coming next!”

I expected not to feel as affectiona­te toward England as I do: when you live in New York, you spend a lot of time explaining your move by telling Americans about stale supermarke­t bagels, washout summers and Boris Johnson. But having been away this long, I’m seeing it anew. The fields are abundant; the towns are bursting with history; the buildings are old and imposing. Schoolchil­dren don’t do active shooter drills and few people tell you they literally don’t believe in government. But the American influence is alive and well: there was an anti-vaxxer march in my mum’s town the day before I arrived, led by a bunch of shawlweari­ng conspiracy theorists with megaphones. Some things never change.

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 ?? (Getty) ?? Green and p l easant l and: it’s good to be back home after a two - year absence
(Getty) Green and p l easant l and: it’s good to be back home after a two - year absence

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