The Gobi Desert - The adventures of three women travelling across the Gobi Desert in the 1920s | 
enlarge | Authors: Mildred Cable, Francesca French Publisher: Trotamundas Press Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy New: $22.69 You Save: $2.31 (9%)
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Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 647547
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 360 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.9 x 1.8
ISBN: 1906393125 EAN: 9781906393120 ASIN: 1906393125
Publication Date: June 26, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description Mildred Cable and Francesca French wrote this remarkable travel book about their esperiences of many years (1923-1936) in the Gobi Desert. They were the first English women to cross the Gobi Desert after twenty years of working as missionaries in the Shansi province of China. This is the kind of travel book which is the result of 13 years of continous travel and thorough knowledge of the region. They describe the Chinese Inns, the monasteries, the archaeological sites, the abandoned cities and the life in the oasis towns. This book brings alive the Gobi Desert and shows how relevant it is still nowadays for those wanting to discover this fascinating part of the world.
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Along the Silk Road October 18, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This may be the best of many good books about Central Asia and the old Silk Road through the deserts of Western China. Mildred Cable and two sisters, Francesca and Eva French, called themselves the "trio." They were missionaries, already middle aged in 1923 when they began a 13 year journey up and down a thousand miles of caravan route -- the Gansu corridor, the Gobi, the Lob, and the further reaches of Sinjiang. Don't let the word "missionary" put you off as there is not much of religion in this book. Only now and then do the authors remind you of their profession.
The excellence of the book stems from the expertise of the authors who spoke Chinese and had decades of experience in China. They were not casual travelers describing their impressions of places seen once. "We ... spent long years in following trade-routes, tracing faint caravan tracks, searching out innumerable by-paths and exploring the most hidden oases," say the authors. "Five times we traversed the whole length of the desert, and in the process we had become part of its life." What they produced is a vivid picture of life in the oases and along the caravan tracks of Chinese Central Asia
They describe in great and fascinating detail their travel by oxcart caravan from one oasis to the next. We learn of the culture of the oxcart drivers, what they eat, how their food is cooked, and how they pack their carts. Similarly, we learn about Chinese inns, monastaries, archaelogical sites, abandoned cities, and the settled life of oasis towns. Near the end of the book we also see that the life and ancient culture they portray is coming to an end as civil war, communists, and the motor age encroach.
I am awed by the audacity of these three women and their hardiness in continuing their lonely work year after year. However, this is not a book about hardship and sacrifice; the authors are cheerful. The trio is tolerant of the diverse people they meet, respectful of Buddhist monks and Muslims, and they seem to thoroughly enjoy themselves.
Smallchief
A delightful and hugely informative piece of travel writing March 7, 2002 15 out of 15 found this review helpful
A serious and very readable account of the travels of two very observant (missionary) ladies in the early part of this century in the Gobi region. This book, illustrated by some fine photos in its early 1940s editions (to which I refer), pays extraordinary and quite sensitive attention to the practices, customs, people and places of this (even now) little known region and it is most creditably written, especially as the writers are Christian missionaries. It is hard to believe that the language and style of this book is over 60 years old. As a (Buddhist) traveller in Central Asia and reader of several books on the region, I would wholeheartedly reccommend this book to anyone interested in this fascinating part of the world.
PS Having travelled several of the routes round the Taklamakan described by the authors in Spring 2004, I would add that the book accurately captured much of the spirit of these lands, even today. I can not really reccommend a more informative (culturally and socially, even allowing for deviations) and vividly written book on the region.
Memories of a Vanished World August 2, 2001 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Around my neck of the woods, in eastern Massachusetts, on any Saturday morning except in winter, you can visit an endless number of yard sales. At malls or in specialty shops, you know what you are going to find---in fact you select a particular store to get what you need. Yard sales are different. You never know what you will find; you rummage around and maybe come up with a treasure. At least you can see what weird and wonderful items people have accumulated over a lifetime. Mildred Cable's book on the Gobi Desert reminded me of a yard sale---and I like yard sales. After many years as missionaries in Shansi province, where they learned fluent Chinese and absorbed the majority culture, Cable and her two female companions, all three Englishwomen, received permission to venture into the deserts of northwestern Kansu and eastern Xinjiang, then still known as Chinese Turkestan. They spent around 13 years, from 1923 to 1936, wandering up and down the rutted desert tracks of this remote area, spreading Bibles and the word of God as known to Christians (and were not excessively denominational about it either). THE GOBI DESERT then, does not exactly cover the whole Gobi Desert, for most of that vast area lies in Mongolia, where the ladies never set foot. It is about the ancient civilizations and mixed ethnic groups (Chinese, Hui, Mongol, Kazakh, Uighur, Manchu, Russian) found in the territory between Suzhou and Urumchi, a breadth of country some 600 miles long, but much narrower due to the lack of water in most of it. The "yard sale" quality of the book lies in the fact that everything is mixed together, but it's all interesting. There are many photographs, but I must say that in my edition (Virago paperback), they were mostly of poor quality. From the history of Hsuean Tsang, who brought the Buddhist scriptures from India to China in the 7th century, to the art of hiring a proper carter, from the fantastic cavesful of Buddhist art at Dunhwang to a detailed description of the Muslim rebellion of 1930, it's all here. The ladies fought scorpions, heat, duststorms, thirst, and exhaustion. They met innkeepers, bandits, deserters, Muslim generals, abbots, princes, Russian refugees, nomads, lamas, and prostitutes. They visited the many fertile oases, remote valleys, mountain strongholds, and salt lakes of a region that has changed dramatically since those days. Though a committed missionary, Cable keeps preaching to a minimum in her book, which is a grab bag of impressions, adventures, and information that will keep your interest to the end. THE GOBI DESERT is the kind of travel book not often seen anymore. It is not an account of a "trip", but rather the winnowed result of thirteen years continuous travel in a particular region. Most of all it is an account of a now-vanished world, a world erased by roads, wars, Communism, and massive Chinese immigration. Read it.
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