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Fragile Cargo

The World War II Race to Save the Treasures of China's Forbidden City

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks
The "gripping and meticulously researched" (The Times, London) true story of the determined museum curators who saved the priceless treasures of China's Forbidden City in the years leading up to World War II and beyond.
Spring 1933: The silent courtyards and palaces of Peking's Forbidden City, for centuries the home of Chinese emperors, are tense with fear and expectation. Japan's aircrafts drone overhead, its troops and tanks are only hours away. All-out war between China and Japan is coming, and the curators of the Forbidden City are faced with an impossible question: how will they protect the vast imperial art collections in their charge? A difficult and monumental decision is made: to safeguard the treasures, they will need to be evacuated.

The magnificent collections contain a million pieces of art—objects that carry China's deepest and most ancient memories. Among them are irreplaceable artefacts: exquisite paintings on silk, rare Ming porcelain, and the extraordinary Stone Drums of Qin, which are adorned with 2,500-year-old inscriptions of cultural significance.

For sixteen years, under the quiet leadership of museum director Ma Heng, the curators would go on to transport the imperial art collections thousands of miles across China—up rivers of white water, across mountain ranges, and through burning cities. In their search for safety the curators and their fragile, invaluable cargo journeyed through the maelstrom of violence, chaos, and starvation that was China's Second World War.

Told for the first time in English and playing out across a vast historical canvas, this "compelling story of art, war, and adventure" (Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of The Romanovs: 1613-1918) follows the small group of men and women who, when faced with war's onslaught on civilization, chose to resist.
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    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2022

      From BBC's Beijing correspondent, Fragile Cargo chronicles efforts by the museum curators of the Forbidden City, home to China's emperor, to evacuate its many treasures as political tensions escalated within the newly formed Republic of China and the Japanese began bombing Shanghai. Truman Book Award winner Leebaert's Unlikely Heroes reexamines four key people--Harry Hopkins, Harold Ickes, Frances Perkins, and Henry Wallace, all seen as outsiders--who served in President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's administration from April 1933 until Roosevelt's death in April 1945 (30,000-copy first printing). The New York Times best-selling authors of The First Conspiracy and The Lincoln Conspiracy, top-notch thriller writer Meltzer and Mensch, a documentary television producer, chronicle The Nazi Conspiracy to assassinate Franklin Roosevelt, Joseph Stalin, and Winston Churchill at their 1943 meeting in Tehran (300,000-copy first printing). From U.S.-born, Netherlands-based Siegal, a novelist/journalist raised in a family of Holocaust survivors, The Diary Keepers blends writings from more than 2,000 diaries kept by Dutch citizens during World War II (125,000-copy first printing).

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 5, 2022
      Journalist Brookes debuts with a novelistic account of Chinese curators’ largely successful efforts to save priceless antiquities first from Japanese bombs during WWII and then from potential looters during Mao Zedong’s Communist takeover. Led by Ma Heng, director of the Palace Museum in Beijing’s (then Peking) Forbidden City, the curators packed and shipped nearly 17,000 cases of objects, including a 10th-century scroll depicting a river in winter and a mid-15th-century red porcelain ewer, deep into China’s hinterlands, where they were stowed in caves, warehouses, and even a Buddhist temple. Many of the most valuable pieces ended up in Taiwan, while others were returned—after nearly 17 years—to the Forbidden City. Along the way, Brookes describes the objects in mesmerizing detail and vividly recounts the human toll of war. The most poignant portrait is of Ma Heng, who came under suspicion and endured a relentless program of “ideological transformation” in the 1950s. The Communist Party, Brookes writes, “took his devotion to the collections and turned it against him, hounding and humiliating him in his final days.” Art lovers and WWII buffs will devour this riveting and bittersweet history. Photos. Agent: Zoë Pagnamenta, Zoë Pagnamenta Agency.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2023
      Devoted archivists struggle to protect the Forbidden City's most precious art from destruction during WWII. Numbering more than a million items, the palace collections contained thousand-year-old paintings, delicate ivory carvings, and "mountains of imperial porcelain" as well as the Stone Drums of Qin, granite boulders bearing ancient inscriptions. But Japanese aggression in Manchuria and the increasing threat of bombers reaching Peking, compelled curators to pack everything up and transport it out. Safety was elusive and often temporary. The 16 years of war and revolution that followed would see the collection--20,000 wooden cases in total--hauled up mountains and shipped across oceans, secreted in caves and stuck on a sandbar. Brookes, who reported for the BBC in China and has written several spy thrillers, emphasizes the courage and persistence of museum director Ma Heng and his colleagues, who coordinated logistics and risked their lives but also had to figure out how to pay for the massive undertaking. Woven into his narrative are keen observations about China's tumultuous birth into modernity.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2023

      Today, the vast treasures of the Chinese imperial art collections are divided between two museums in Taipei and Beijing. Former journalist Brookes tells the exciting story of how this came to be. For centuries, this was the private collection of Chinese emperors. When the last emperor was evicted from the Forbidden City in 1925, a museum was founded to take control of more than a million paintings, sculptures, pieces of porcelain, books, and other priceless items. As Japan threatened northern China in 1931, the museum administration decided to take on the daunting task of packing the items into more than 13,000 cases and relocating them to Nanjing. When the war reached that city in 1937, the collections were moved to Chongqing and other locations in western China. After the war ended 1945, the items were returned to Nanjing, but they became endangered again when the civil war between Nationalists and Communists resumed. By 1949, nearly 3,000 cases of the most valuable items in the collections were evacuated to Taiwan before Communist forces overtook the city. VERDICT Highly recommended for anyone interested in mid-20th century China in specific, or art history in general.--Joshua Wallace

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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