Turkestan Reunion
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Author: Eleanor Holgate Lattimore, Evelyn Schwartz Stefansson ISBN: 1568360533 Format: Paperback, 329pp Pub. Date: December 1994 Publisher: Kodan-Sha America, Inc. |
ANNOTATION
Over the steppes and peaks of high Asia, here is the unforgettable chronicle of
a harrowing honeymoon adventure. Turkestan Reunion, a series of long "letters
home, " is Eleanor Lattimore's vibrant, gem-like counterpart to husband Owen's
classic historical account of the same journey in High Tartary. Line drawings.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publisher's Weekly
Orientalist Lattimore and his wife spent the six early months of their married
life apart. They had planned a honeymoon in Chinese Turkestan, but they would
reach it by different routes: Owen by caravans across Mongolia (a trip outlined
in The Desert Road to Turkestan); Eleanor by the Trans-Siberian Railway,
followed by a lengthy, unanticipated midwinter sledge ride from Semipalatinsk to
Chuguchak. But it is the trip through present-day Xinjiang (Sinkiang), then
bordered by Mongolia, India, Tibet and the U.S.S.R., that primarily concerns
these two parallel travelogues. What makes Xinjiang so fascinating is that it is
the ultimate frontier. Replete with desert expanses and nearly untraversable
mountain passes, in 1927 it was home to petty lordlings, shysters, renegades and
mercenaries of every background (including many White Russians). Eleanor's
impressionistic epistolary account is by far the more readable of the two. Owen,
one of the "Old China Hands" who would be excoriated by McCarthy, offers a
scholarly account that bears the passage of 70 years less easily. (Dec.)