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HER LOTUS YEAR by Paul French

HER LOTUS YEAR

China, the Roaring Twenties, and the Making of Wallis Simpson

by Paul French

Pub Date: Nov. 12th, 2024
ISBN: 9781250287472
Publisher: St. Martin's

An account of the conditions and context of Wallis Simpson’s yearlong sojourn in China.

About a decade before Simpson became the Duchess of Windsor, she was Wallis Spencer, edging toward divorce from her drunk, abusive husband, Win. A lieutenant commander in the United States Navy, Win was stationed for a time in China with the South China Patrol. Having first arrived in China in 1924 to mend her tumultuous marriage, Wallis remained in the emerging, embattled Chinese Republic for a year that she later referred to as transformative. French, author of the bestselling Midnight in Peking, traces Wallis’ movement between storied hotels and international enclaves in Hong Kong, Canton (Guangzhou), Tientsin (Tianjin), Shanghai, and, finally, Peking (Beijing), with his subject’s travels, friendships, and social frolicking forming the spine of his exposition. However, because of limitations on access to archives concerning both the British royal family and Chinese history, the author must rely on sources that sit adjacent to Wallis, including a series of British and American novelists and other expat socialites whose escapades may have been co-opted to fuel sordid rumors about Wallis during the abdication of King Edward VIII. Potential for intrigue and revelation—Was Wallis Spencer an intrepid documents courier for the U.S. Navy?—fizzles into lush and spicy but inconsequential details of the social milieu. In a text riddled with “might have”s, “could not have”s, and “it is possible”s, Wallis does not make for a transparent, substantial, or thoroughly compelling subject. Instead, she feels like a shadow with a hypothetical filling, the import to her trajectory of the year under study only partially convincing. French does, however, strikingly render an oft-fetishized time and place, countering the familiar mythologizing of both the Roaring Twenties, with its Eurocentric literary obsessions, and the path of China from dynastic to communist rule.

An occasionally entertaining look at a little-known bridge between American, British, and Chinese history.