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The Lady and the Panda: The True Adventures of the First American Explorer to Bring Back China's Most Exotic Animal (2005)

par Vicki Croke

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3362077,226 (3.86)20
Here is the astonishing true story of Ruth Harkness, the Manhattan bohemian socialite who, against all but impossible odds, trekked to Tibet in 1936 to capture the most mysterious animal of the day: a bear that had for countless centuries lived in secret in the labyrinth of lonely cold mountains. In The Lady and the Panda, Vicki Constantine Croke gives us the remarkable account of Ruth Harkness and her extraordinary journey, and restores Harkness to her rightful place along with Sacajawea, Nellie Bly, and Amelia Earhart as one of the great woman adventurers of all time. Ruth was the toast of 1930s New York, a dress designer newly married to a wealthy adventurer, Bill Harkness. Just weeks after their wedding, however, Bill decamped for China in hopes of becoming the first Westerner to capture a giant panda-an expedition on which many had embarked and failed miserably. Bill was also to fail in his quest, dying horribly alone in China and leaving his widow heartbroken and adrift. And so Ruth made the fateful decision to adopt her husband's dream as her own and set off on the adventure of a lifetime. It was not easy. Indeed, everything was against Ruth Harkness. In decadent Shanghai, the exclusive fraternity of white male explorers patronized her, scorned her, and joked about her softness, her lack of experience and money. But Ruth ignored them, organizing, outfitting, and leading a bare-bones campaign into the majestic but treacherous hinterlands where China borders Tibet. As her partner she chose Quentin Young, a twenty-two-year-old Chinese explorer as unconventional as she was, who would join her in a romance as torrid as it was taboo. Traveling across some of the toughest terrain in the world-nearly impenetrable bamboo forests, slick and perilous mountain slopes, and boulder-strewn passages-the team raced against a traitorous rival, and was constantly threatened by hordes of bandits and hostile natives. The voyage took months to complete and cost Ruth everything she had. But when, almost miraculously, she returned from her journey with a baby panda named Su Lin in her arms, the story became an international sensation and made the front pages of newspapers around the world. No animal in history had gotten such attention. And Ruth Harkness became a hero. Drawing extensively on American and Chinese sources, including diaries, scores of interviews, and previously unseen intimate letters from Ruth Harkness, Vicki Constantine Croke has fashioned a captivating and richly textured narrative about a woman ahead of her time. Part Myrna Loy, part Jane Goodall, by turns wisecracking and poetic, practical and spiritual, Ruth Harkness is a trailblazing figure. And her story makes for an unforgettable, deeply moving adventure.… (plus d'informations)
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Young newlywed socialite Ruth Harkness hoped to join her husband on his excursion to central China to bring to the US the world’s rarest bear - the Giant Panda. Unfortunately he died in a Shanghai hospital, so she has to do it herself. Through a combination of risk-taking, preparedness, and mostly luck, Harkness successfully brought a baby Giant Panda to Chicago’s Brookfield Zoo in 1936 and returned to China two more times to try again.

My expectations for this book were very low but I absolutely loved it. It's hard to have a lot of sympathy for a rich socialite during the Great Depression but she was very progressive in her views on and treatment of animals, and significantly less racist against the Chinese people than most of her contemporaries. This story should definitely be a movie - it has the perfect villain in an older white male explorer who is kind of going off the deep end and focusing all of his hubris on misogyny against Ruth and spreading lies that she bought her baby panda from him instead of finding it herself, as well as a young Chinese explorer that Ruth has a secret affair with while trekking into the mountains. I learned a great deal about China in the 1930s, as Ruth’s second and third expeditions were stymied by the Nanking Massacre and its aftermath.

In particular, the endnotes of this book were spectacular - every sentence, from the weather on particular days to emotions a character was feeling, is extensively sourced from personal letters, contemporary newspaper articles, and interviews. There are also some short anecdotes and details in the endnotes, which Croke says she could not fit into the story but wanted to make sure they were included in the book as they had never before been published. How thoughtful. ( )
  norabelle414 | Jul 17, 2023 |
This is a thoroughly researched travelogue about an unconventional flapper woman turned explorer and panda baby mama. ( )
  Marietje.Halbertsma | Jan 9, 2022 |
Blurb from GR's MP: Here is the astonishing true story of Ruth Harkness, the Manhattan bohemian socialite who, against all but impossible odds, trekked to Tibet in 1936 to capture the most mysterious animal of the day

That is what drew me to this book. A woman, in 1936! I needed to know more.

Ruth Harkness, was a newly wed 30 something dress designer. Her husband, Bill, was a wealthy adventurer (yes, that was an occupation back then). Just weeks after their wedding Bill went to China in search of the illusive Panda. Bill failed, and died while in China. Grief stricken, and not sure how to carry on Ruth decided that, in his name, she would fulfill his mission. Needless to say she was laughed at, told to stop being silly and countless other clichés. Ruth persisted and won the respect she deserved by bringing an infant giant panda home to the USA.

What a woman, what a story! I loved it and was glad it caught my attention. ( )
  JBroda | Sep 24, 2021 |
Interesting story. Somewhat light on the effects her efforts had on the whole business of providing animals to zoos. The book also glosses over world events during her time in China.
A quick and sometimes exciting read about about a brave, flawed human being. ( )
  Catherine.Cox | Aug 11, 2019 |
Takes a baby panda home. ( )
  dimajazz | Jan 27, 2019 |
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China is a country of unforgettable color, and often, quite unbidden come vivid pictures to my mind—sometimes it is the golden roofs of the Imperial City in Peking, or again it is the yellow corn on the flat-roofed little stone houses in the country of the Tibetan border land.
— Ruth Harkness
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It was a bitter winter night, February 19, 1936, and on the outskirts of Shanghai, far from the neon and the wailing jazz, a thirty-four-year-old William Harvest Harkness, Jr. lay in a private hospital, blood-stiffened silk sutures tracking across his pale abdomen. He was dying and alone in his agony.
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Here is the astonishing true story of Ruth Harkness, the Manhattan bohemian socialite who, against all but impossible odds, trekked to Tibet in 1936 to capture the most mysterious animal of the day: a bear that had for countless centuries lived in secret in the labyrinth of lonely cold mountains. In The Lady and the Panda, Vicki Constantine Croke gives us the remarkable account of Ruth Harkness and her extraordinary journey, and restores Harkness to her rightful place along with Sacajawea, Nellie Bly, and Amelia Earhart as one of the great woman adventurers of all time. Ruth was the toast of 1930s New York, a dress designer newly married to a wealthy adventurer, Bill Harkness. Just weeks after their wedding, however, Bill decamped for China in hopes of becoming the first Westerner to capture a giant panda-an expedition on which many had embarked and failed miserably. Bill was also to fail in his quest, dying horribly alone in China and leaving his widow heartbroken and adrift. And so Ruth made the fateful decision to adopt her husband's dream as her own and set off on the adventure of a lifetime. It was not easy. Indeed, everything was against Ruth Harkness. In decadent Shanghai, the exclusive fraternity of white male explorers patronized her, scorned her, and joked about her softness, her lack of experience and money. But Ruth ignored them, organizing, outfitting, and leading a bare-bones campaign into the majestic but treacherous hinterlands where China borders Tibet. As her partner she chose Quentin Young, a twenty-two-year-old Chinese explorer as unconventional as she was, who would join her in a romance as torrid as it was taboo. Traveling across some of the toughest terrain in the world-nearly impenetrable bamboo forests, slick and perilous mountain slopes, and boulder-strewn passages-the team raced against a traitorous rival, and was constantly threatened by hordes of bandits and hostile natives. The voyage took months to complete and cost Ruth everything she had. But when, almost miraculously, she returned from her journey with a baby panda named Su Lin in her arms, the story became an international sensation and made the front pages of newspapers around the world. No animal in history had gotten such attention. And Ruth Harkness became a hero. Drawing extensively on American and Chinese sources, including diaries, scores of interviews, and previously unseen intimate letters from Ruth Harkness, Vicki Constantine Croke has fashioned a captivating and richly textured narrative about a woman ahead of her time. Part Myrna Loy, part Jane Goodall, by turns wisecracking and poetic, practical and spiritual, Ruth Harkness is a trailblazing figure. And her story makes for an unforgettable, deeply moving adventure.

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