News from Tartary: A Journey from Peking to Kashmir -
Peter Fleming
1936 - Jonathan Cape, London - First Edition
A fine first edition of one of Peter Fleming’s great travel books, in a nice example of the scarce dust jacket.
An extraordinary travel narrative in the company of Swiss adventurer Ella Maillart, crossing from Beijing through central China and into the north of the Indian subcontinent. Illustrated with 32 photographic plates including a frontispiece, and a fold-out map.
“’News from Tartary’ describes a phenomenally successful attempt that legendary adventurer Peter Fleming made to travel overland from Peking to Kashmir. The journey took seven months and covered about 3,500 miles. Motivated largely by curiosity, he set out with his companion Ella Maillart across a China torn by civil war to journey through Xinjiang to British India. It had been eight years since anyone had crossed Xinjiang; in between, those who had entered this inhospitable and politically volatile area – under the control of a warlord supported by Stalin's Red Army – seldom left alive. Entering the province by a little known route and following the path of the Silk Road, they ended up in Kashgar before crossing the Pamirs to India. Beautifully written and superbly observed, this is not simply an account of a part of the world few of us will ever see, but also a marvellous insight into the last days of the Great Game, when Britain and Russia still faced each other across a Central Asia in a state of anarchy.” [Taurus] Peter Fleming, OBE, (1907-1971) was a journalist and writer and one of the last great adventurers of the twentieth century. He began his career as a special correspondent with ‘The Times’ and later wrote for ‘The Spectator’. He served with the Grenadier Guards during World War II and from 1942 was in charge of military deception operations in Southeast Asia. He is author of several classic books, which include ‘Brazilian Adventure’, ‘News from Tartary’, ‘Bayonets to Lhasa’, and ‘One's Company’. In his memory, The Royal Geographical Society established ‘The Peter Fleming Award’ for projects that seek to advance geographical science.
Reference: Gilbert, Ian Fleming - The Bibliography, 618.
Octavo (book size 20.7x14.9cm)), pp. 384. In publisher’s burgundy cloth, spine with gilt lettering and publisher’s device, three Chinese characters "Fu Lei-Ming" in gilt to front board, top edge tinted burgundy, bottom edge untrimmed, dust jacket price-clipped to lower corner of front flap, all other corners with publisher’s decorative trim. Condition: Fine in near fine price-clipped dust jacket, rubbing to corners with short tears to head of spine. Ref: 112433 Price: HK$ 6,000
An extraordinary travel narrative in the company of Swiss adventurer Ella Maillart, crossing from Beijing through central China and into the north of the Indian subcontinent. Illustrated with 32 photographic plates including a frontispiece, and a fold-out map.
“’News from Tartary’ describes a phenomenally successful attempt that legendary adventurer Peter Fleming made to travel overland from Peking to Kashmir. The journey took seven months and covered about 3,500 miles. Motivated largely by curiosity, he set out with his companion Ella Maillart across a China torn by civil war to journey through Xinjiang to British India. It had been eight years since anyone had crossed Xinjiang; in between, those who had entered this inhospitable and politically volatile area – under the control of a warlord supported by Stalin's Red Army – seldom left alive. Entering the province by a little known route and following the path of the Silk Road, they ended up in Kashgar before crossing the Pamirs to India. Beautifully written and superbly observed, this is not simply an account of a part of the world few of us will ever see, but also a marvellous insight into the last days of the Great Game, when Britain and Russia still faced each other across a Central Asia in a state of anarchy.” [Taurus] Peter Fleming, OBE, (1907-1971) was a journalist and writer and one of the last great adventurers of the twentieth century. He began his career as a special correspondent with ‘The Times’ and later wrote for ‘The Spectator’. He served with the Grenadier Guards during World War II and from 1942 was in charge of military deception operations in Southeast Asia. He is author of several classic books, which include ‘Brazilian Adventure’, ‘News from Tartary’, ‘Bayonets to Lhasa’, and ‘One's Company’. In his memory, The Royal Geographical Society established ‘The Peter Fleming Award’ for projects that seek to advance geographical science.
Reference: Gilbert, Ian Fleming - The Bibliography, 618.
Octavo (book size 20.7x14.9cm)), pp. 384. In publisher’s burgundy cloth, spine with gilt lettering and publisher’s device, three Chinese characters "Fu Lei-Ming" in gilt to front board, top edge tinted burgundy, bottom edge untrimmed, dust jacket price-clipped to lower corner of front flap, all other corners with publisher’s decorative trim. Condition: Fine in near fine price-clipped dust jacket, rubbing to corners with short tears to head of spine. Ref: 112433 Price: HK$ 6,000

