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You are here: Home / Bibliography / The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke

The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke

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A bold portrait of Doris Duke, the defiant and notorious tobacco heiress who was perhaps the greatest modern woman philanthropist.

The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke
The first serious literary biography of a complex woman, the greatest woman philanthropist of the twentieth century, based on her extensive archive at Duke University in Durham, NC.

Written by: Sallie Bingham
Date published: April 7, 2020
Published by: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
URL: us.macmillan.com
Binding(s): Hardcover,Paperback

In The Silver Swan, Sallie Bingham chronicles one of the great underexplored lives of the twentieth century and the very archetype of the modern woman. “Don’t touch that girl, she’ll burn your fingers,” FBI director J. Edgar Hoover once said about Doris Duke, the inheritor of James Buchanan Duke’s billion-dollar tobacco fortune. During her lifetime, she would be blamed for scorching many, including her mother and various ex-lovers. She established her first foundation when she was twenty-one; cultivated friendships with the likes of Jackie Kennedy, Imelda Marcos, and Michael Jackson; flaunted interracial relationships; and adopted a thirty-two year-old woman she believed to be the reincarnation of her deceased daughter. This is also the story of the great houses she inhabited, including the classically proportioned limestone mansion on Fifth Avenue, the sprawling Duke Farms in New Jersey, the Gilded Age mansion Rough Point in Newport, Shangri La in Honolulu, and Falcon’s Lair overlooking Beverly Hills.

Even though Duke was the subject of constant scrutiny, little beyond the tabloid accounts of her behavior has been publicly known. In 2012, when eight hundred linear feet of her personal papers were made available, Sallie Bingham set out to probe her identity. She found an alluring woman whose life was forged in the Jazz Age, who was not only an early war correspondent but also an environmentalist, a surfer, a collector of Islamic art, a savvy businesswoman who tripled her father’s fortune, and a major philanthropist with wide-ranging passions from dance to historic preservation to human rights.

In The Silver Swan, Bingham is especially interested in dissecting the stereotypes that have defined Duke’s story while also confronting the disturbing questions that cleave to her legacy.

Men who inherit great wealth are respected, but women who do the same are ridiculed. In The Silver Swan, Sallie Bingham rescues Doris Duke from this gendered prison and shows us just how brave, rebellious, and creative this unique woman really was, and how her generosity benefits us to this day.”— Gloria Steinem

In her fascinating book about tobacco heiress Doris Duke, whose net worth had ballooned to $1.2 billion by her death in 1993, Bingham gets at how inherited wealth liberates women but also burdens them.”— The National Book Review, “5 HOT BOOKS”

In this illuminating biography, Bingham (The Blue Box) chronicles the life of philanthropist and tobacco heiress Doris Duke (1912–1993)… Bingham is a generous biographer in this exacting, measured work.”— Publishers Weekly

Bingham adds a trove of new material to the Duke oeuvre, including revealing quotations from letters and details of daily life on Duke’s many estates.”— The New York Times

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Posts on The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke:

Margaret in the Wilderness

Posted: April 2nd, 2023

Surrounded by disasters of every kind, we are seeing the great strengths of our extraordinary adaptability, valued and valuable as it has never been before.  

Doris Farewell

Posted: April 10th, 2022

Thursday night I was privileged to present a conversation about my book and Doris Duke in one of the huge gilded rooms at Rough Point...  

Doris Redux

Posted: April 6th, 2022

I'm about to leave New York City in its grey rain for Newport and Rough Point, the big house on Ocean Avenue Doris inherited from her father and that seems to have been closely associated, for her, with her mother.  

Getting to YES

Posted: March 24th, 2022

Out of the sour ground of NO spring many hopeful sprigs, especially the generous responses to so many of my posts from you.  

Margaret in the Wilderness

Posted: March 17th, 2022

Surrounded by disasters of every kind, we are seeing the great strengths of our extraordinary adaptability, valued and valuable as it has never been before.  

The Silver Swan Sails Again

Posted: December 15th, 2021

Due to the generosity of a store here in Santa Fe called Travel Bug, I was able to give a reading from the biography a few days ago to a large and appreciative crowd.   

Making Heroines

Posted: December 12th, 2021

Where are our heroines?  

Two Women: Margaret and Doris

Posted: September 24th, 2021

I've come to believe over the years that there is a core similarity that connects the lives of all women. I think it is our ability to adapt.  

Doris Duke: A Lifetime Search for Faith

Posted: March 17th, 2021

On Tuesday, March 9, 2021 I presented a talk to The Library Committee of The Church of the Holy Faith in Santa Fe, New Mexico entitled "Doris Duke: A Lifetime Search for Faith."  

Vindication

Posted: February 17th, 2021

The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation's grant of 1.6 million dollars to pay for the digitalization of thousands of tape-recorded oral histories of indigenous people has a special meaning for me.  

Sallie Bingham Reads

Posted: October 7th, 2020

A wise interviewer asked me yesterday what I hoped to achieve through the presentation of my two current books...  

And Now, Margaret Sanger

Posted: July 22nd, 2020

Yesterday, Planned Parenthood of Greater New York removed the name of Margaret Sanger, "founder of the organization," from its Manhattan clinic because of her "harmful connection to the eugenics movement."  

What We Can’t Say Now

Posted: July 8th, 2020

We need to define, and vigorously defend, the line between art and politics.  

Clearing Out

Posted: May 10th, 2020

As I put my files, copies of the originals at Duke, into boxes for the shredder, I glance at a few that came as such pleasant surprises when I first found them eight or nine years ago.  

The Delights of Research

Posted: April 12th, 2020

There is nothing like opening a file box, with some unknown's penciled label at the top, and diving into an absolutely unpredictable collection of letters, notes, interviews—anything Doris Duke, in my case, decided to save.  

“The Swan” Launches!

Posted: April 7th, 2020

I am so grateful to all my readers and potential readers and I look forward to being in touch with each and every one of you.  

Doris Duke is Born

Posted: March 8th, 2020

What do I hope my biography will accomplish? Nothing less than a complete reconsideration of Doris Duke.  

What Was Cut

Posted: February 16th, 2020

I suppose it’s a stretch—but then what is the point of writing without stretching?—but I think if Doris Duke had known about Julian Abele’s work, she would have admired him and regretted that during his life time, he was never given his due.  

At Last

Posted: May 26th, 2019

In Manhattan last week, I was finally able to assure myself that The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke, will be published next spring.  

The Next Step

Posted: November 4th, 2018

How to live on nothing is a question the publishers have not condescended to consider.  

Celebrities

Posted: July 22nd, 2018

These days if a writer is smitten with the idea of writing a new book—a new analysis—of any supposedly well-known person, the obstacles to her research will be enormous.  

Doris Duke: Changing Faces

Posted: June 24th, 2018

We are all too complicated and contradictory to be explained.  

Death of Ten Thousand Pricks

Posted: February 27th, 2018

Scheduled to be published in August, 2018, The Silver Swan is now delayed till sometime in 2019.  

I Want It to Be Said

Posted: January 15th, 2018

By now we all know that the discrimination that afflicts one group afflicts all of us.  

Doris Duke: Love, Sex, Power and Money

Posted: January 9th, 2018

Does it matter that she never found her match in terms of money, status and achievement?  

I Didn’t Sing for a Year

Posted: December 17th, 2017

I remember being amazed when my young granddaughters and their friends listened, apparently unperturbed, to hip hop verses that demonize or degrade women.  

Music Hath Charms

Posted: November 12th, 2017

I grew up with almost no music at all. Music, after all, is not words and only words counted in that world.  

Doris Duke and the Sea

Posted: October 15th, 2017

Both Doris and Alleda developed physical strength, courage and confidence battling the waves on the beaches at Newport.  

Doris Duke Goes to Press

Posted: October 8th, 2017

My relief in learning that “The Silver Swan” will be published next June prompts me to rejoice like old-time newspaper editors when the daily edition was put to bed.  

Doris Duke and Rich People’s Secrets

Posted: September 12th, 2017

Our culture is unjust because we, its citizens, are satisfied for it to be that way.  

Life Is What Leaps

Posted: July 6th, 2017

How to keep a spark of hope alive in our so-called democratic process? How not to drop into numbness and apathy?  

The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke

Posted: July 4th, 2017

Changing the title of my biography of Doris Duke, especially after more than six years of work, is a big deal.  

Innards

Posted: June 1st, 2017

I am blessed—and have been for six long years—in being given the responsibility of writing Doris Duke's biography.  

Claiming the Broom

Posted: April 25th, 2017

The witch with her broom is also the woman tossed up in a basket—the high flyer, the visionary, terrifying to many... and more necessary now than ever.  

Girl vs. Bull

Posted: March 12th, 2017

I know Doris Duke would have enjoyed seeing the statue of a little girl confronting the bull of Wall Street.  

Women Writing Women’s Lives

Posted: February 16th, 2017

Where, now, are the women writers we could call “outrageous”?  

You Come Too

Posted: October 13th, 2016

I'm asking you, my able and loyal readers, to “come too” as I head into yet another revision of my biography on Doris Duke. Originally set to be published in 2016, it is now delayed until October, 2018.  

An Independent Will

Posted: October 6th, 2016

Charlotte Brontë described the alienation that colored my childhood, and the childhood of so many girls, then and now.  

Divine Insecurity

Posted: September 18th, 2016

Pip and I were on to adventure, on the edge of danger, full of life and energy—the way I want to live.  

Commemorating What?

Posted: May 30th, 2016

Memorial Day, commenced in 1866 as Decoration Day, was at first specifically meant to honor the Confederate dead; when it became a national holiday in 1921, it was renamed to honor the dead in all our wars, another effort to erase differences and commodify mourning.  

Doris Duke Takes Another Step

Posted: October 6th, 2015

I wonder what Doris would think if she could sit at the breakfast table with my editor and me and talk about who the book’s readers will be.  

Doris Duke Moves into the Limelight

Posted: July 30th, 2015

I am now reading, and occasionally wrestling with, what might be call the collision—or the creative cooperation—of two minds, essentially different: the mind of the writer and the mind of the editor.  

Coming Soon: The Blue Box, Three Lives in Letters

Posted: May 27th, 2014

The long waits publishing entrails always make me wonder why writers sometimes refer to their new books as their children; surely no pregnancy lasts two years or more, and few professional writers wait to see their next book launched before laboring mightily to begin the next one.  

Hearing The News

Posted: June 18th, 2012

For my “Doris,” a home at the university her father founded...you will understand my delight and appreciation as well as my humility in the face of the many challenges I will encounter as I being to write.  

Posts on/about Doris Duke:

The Zombie Law

Posted: June 26th, 2024

Michelle Goldberg's column in The New York Times describes the 1935 Federal Comstock Act as a threat that Americans have not taken seriously.  

Margaret in the Wilderness

Posted: April 2nd, 2023

Surrounded by disasters of every kind, we are seeing the great strengths of our extraordinary adaptability, valued and valuable as it has never been before.  

Doris Farewell

Posted: April 10th, 2022

Thursday night I was privileged to present a conversation about my book and Doris Duke in one of the huge gilded rooms at Rough Point...  

Doris Redux

Posted: April 6th, 2022

I'm about to leave New York City in its grey rain for Newport and Rough Point, the big house on Ocean Avenue Doris inherited from her father and that seems to have been closely associated, for her, with her mother.  

Margaret in the Wilderness

Posted: March 17th, 2022

Surrounded by disasters of every kind, we are seeing the great strengths of our extraordinary adaptability, valued and valuable as it has never been before.  

The Silver Swan Sails Again

Posted: December 15th, 2021

Due to the generosity of a store here in Santa Fe called Travel Bug, I was able to give a reading from the biography a few days ago to a large and appreciative crowd.   

Two Women: Margaret and Doris

Posted: September 24th, 2021

I've come to believe over the years that there is a core similarity that connects the lives of all women. I think it is our ability to adapt.  

Doris Duke: A Lifetime Search for Faith

Posted: March 17th, 2021

On Tuesday, March 9, 2021 I presented a talk to The Library Committee of The Church of the Holy Faith in Santa Fe, New Mexico entitled "Doris Duke: A Lifetime Search for Faith."  

Vindication

Posted: February 17th, 2021

The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation's grant of 1.6 million dollars to pay for the digitalization of thousands of tape-recorded oral histories of indigenous people has a special meaning for me.  

And Now, Margaret Sanger

Posted: July 22nd, 2020

Yesterday, Planned Parenthood of Greater New York removed the name of Margaret Sanger, "founder of the organization," from its Manhattan clinic because of her "harmful connection to the eugenics movement."  

What We Can’t Say Now

Posted: July 8th, 2020

We need to define, and vigorously defend, the line between art and politics.  

A Queen Exiled at Home

Posted: May 3rd, 2020

If we treat ourselves as the queens we are, the example of Liliʻuokalani may inspire us.  

The Delights of Research

Posted: April 12th, 2020

There is nothing like opening a file box, with some unknown's penciled label at the top, and diving into an absolutely unpredictable collection of letters, notes, interviews—anything Doris Duke, in my case, decided to save.  

Doris Duke is Born

Posted: March 8th, 2020

What do I hope my biography will accomplish? Nothing less than a complete reconsideration of Doris Duke.  

What Was Cut

Posted: February 16th, 2020

I suppose it’s a stretch—but then what is the point of writing without stretching?—but I think if Doris Duke had known about Julian Abele’s work, she would have admired him and regretted that during his life time, he was never given his due.  

Legacy of Harm

Posted: June 2nd, 2019

Doris Duke must at least have wondered if her generosity, in all its forms, could ever compensate for the destructive effects of nicotine addiction.   

At Last

Posted: May 26th, 2019

In Manhattan last week, I was finally able to assure myself that The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke, will be published next spring.  

Caught in the Act

Posted: February 10th, 2019

One of the most notable differences between women and men in public life is we seem to know better how to avoid scandal.  

Doris Duke: Changing Faces

Posted: June 24th, 2018

We are all too complicated and contradictory to be explained.  

To Be of Use: The Lisa Unger Baskin Collection

Posted: May 20th, 2018

A great collection is always based on a passion. It is not random. It grows from a strong root.  

Death of Ten Thousand Pricks

Posted: February 27th, 2018

Scheduled to be published in August, 2018, The Silver Swan is now delayed till sometime in 2019.  

Doris Duke: Love, Sex, Power and Money

Posted: January 9th, 2018

Does it matter that she never found her match in terms of money, status and achievement?  

I Didn’t Sing for a Year

Posted: December 17th, 2017

I remember being amazed when my young granddaughters and their friends listened, apparently unperturbed, to hip hop verses that demonize or degrade women.  

Happy Birthday, Doris

Posted: November 22nd, 2017

Sometimes a choice of a name without family connotations means an attempt to break loose from the past.  

Ring of Fire

Posted: October 31st, 2017

Remarkable women are surrounded by a ring of fire... made up of glowing embers of gossip, innuendo, and misunderstanding.  

Doris Duke and the Sea

Posted: October 15th, 2017

Both Doris and Alleda developed physical strength, courage and confidence battling the waves on the beaches at Newport.  

Doris Duke Goes to Press

Posted: October 8th, 2017

My relief in learning that “The Silver Swan” will be published next June prompts me to rejoice like old-time newspaper editors when the daily edition was put to bed.  

Life Is What Leaps

Posted: July 6th, 2017

How to keep a spark of hope alive in our so-called democratic process? How not to drop into numbness and apathy?  

The Silver Swan: In Search of Doris Duke

Posted: July 4th, 2017

Changing the title of my biography of Doris Duke, especially after more than six years of work, is a big deal.  

Innards

Posted: June 1st, 2017

I am blessed—and have been for six long years—in being given the responsibility of writing Doris Duke's biography.  

Why I Didn’t Get Pregnant

Posted: April 11th, 2017

With our silence, we are promoting, however unintentionally, the Trump administration’s war on women.  

Girl vs. Bull

Posted: March 12th, 2017

I know Doris Duke would have enjoyed seeing the statue of a little girl confronting the bull of Wall Street.  

Tony’s Stairs

Posted: October 23rd, 2016

In Mabel's case, as in the case of so many women, it’s the myths rather than the facts that are remembered.  

You Come Too

Posted: October 13th, 2016

I'm asking you, my able and loyal readers, to “come too” as I head into yet another revision of my biography on Doris Duke. Originally set to be published in 2016, it is now delayed until October, 2018.  

Girls of Summer

Posted: July 3rd, 2016

If she can move like this playing paddle ball, surely she can act with equal skill, grace, and assurance in a board room, a corporate office, or an artist’s studio.  

New Year’s Day

Posted: January 3rd, 2016

I am wishing all of you, friends, acquaintances and strangers, who are kind enough to read these thoughts, the most beneficial, peaceful and fruitful new year—a cold winter with lots of snow, a spring full of bloom.  

Peggy Guggenheim: Life as Art, Art as Life

Posted: December 17th, 2015

All those big artist's names, and never a woman’s, although she did have a show in the gallery she owned earlier, first in London and then in New York, of thirty-one women artists.  

Doris Duke in Pictures and the Deconstruction of the Past

Posted: November 19th, 2015

My chapters about Doris’ war-time service are some of the most revealing, and most controversial, in my upcoming biography.  

Doris Duke Takes Another Step

Posted: October 6th, 2015

I wonder what Doris would think if she could sit at the breakfast table with my editor and me and talk about who the book’s readers will be.  

Doris Duke Moves into the Limelight

Posted: July 30th, 2015

I am now reading, and occasionally wrestling with, what might be call the collision—or the creative cooperation—of two minds, essentially different: the mind of the writer and the mind of the editor.  

Scandal, Rumor and Innuendo: Doris Duke and Popular Imagination

Posted: May 5th, 2015

Almost the only question people asked me about her is, “Did Doris Duke marry her butler?” No, she did not. But does that question really matter, in a long, complex and accomplished life?  

A Passion for Houses

Posted: May 3rd, 2015

This house has reigned on a leafy corner of a beautiful street, a few blocks from the Santa Fe Plaza, for 150 years, inhabited by a distinguished family.  

Doris Duke and Me: Dancing

Posted: April 28th, 2015

Doris Duke practiced with Martha Graham’s company in New York and proudly wore their black satin jacket with her name and the company’s name on the back.  

Glamour-Puss

Posted: April 14th, 2015

I sometimes think that love never touched her, although she knew many lovers. Always she seemed to be asking as she did of one of them, “Are you doing what you’re doing to please ME?”  

Breeding

Posted: April 7th, 2015

The variety is endless, but the end result is the same: enormous fledglings crowding the adult bird out of the messy nest.  

My Apprenticeships

Posted: April 5th, 2015

Apprenticeships of any kind—even that sort involved in learning to sew on a button—depend on a bitter and prolonged deprivation of pleasure, a narrow and deep focus that will never allow for what we call a balanced life.  

Loving Dogs

Posted: March 31st, 2015

Today I find myself in complete sympathy with Doris Duke’s passion, even with the uncomfortable assumption that dogs are sometimes better companions than complicated, changeable humans.  

Doris Duke: Getting Dirty

Posted: March 5th, 2015

Getting dirty as a child allowed Doris Duke to develop into the daring woman she became. I wonder how many eight year old girls today would be allowed to wander on the beach in a dirty shift, with mud up to their knees?  

Doris Duke, Pop Music, and Me

Posted: February 24th, 2015

Doris, high-diving, surfing in Hawaii, battling the waves on a stormy day off Newport as she had ever since childhood, might have resisted pop music’s anthem of female submission.  

Doris Duke: First White Woman Surfer In Hawaii

Posted: November 11th, 2014

Nothing could prevent Doris from seizing that moment in the surf at Hawaii when she reared high in the air, arms thrown back and chin lifted, exulting in her power to do what she wanted.  

The Self-Realization Fellowship and Doris Duke

Posted: July 8th, 2014

If there is a chance, and I think there is one, that Doris was touched and perhaps even changed by her connection, whatever it may prove to have been, with the Self-Realization Fellowship, her miseries would have been if not reduced, placed in a realistic context, uniting her with her fellows.  

Something Has Gone Wrong

Posted: January 27th, 2014

Something has gone wrong with this coun­try, and I don’t know how or exactly when.  

I Stand Corrected…

Posted: January 5th, 2014

My granddaughter told me last evening that she in fact DID NOT WATCH “Sex in the City” as I had assumed, but “Desperate Housewives.”  

Hearing The News

Posted: June 18th, 2012

For my “Doris,” a home at the university her father founded...you will understand my delight and appreciation as well as my humility in the face of the many challenges I will encounter as I being to write.  

Hats and Pearls…

Posted: March 15th, 2012

“Doing good” has always been associated with that look which is why Doris Duke, mysterious, unpredictable, may turn out to be an interesting subject for my next book. Already I gather that she “did good” without caring much about it or dreaming of wearing “do good” clothes.  

The Uses of Scandal

Posted: March 2nd, 2012

Next week, as I begin to unravel the many strands of Doris Duke’s life, I must work hard to clear away my prejudices.  

On To The Next

Posted: December 20th, 2011

Now that my newest book, Mending: New and Selected Short Stories is reaching its readers, I find myself in a rather delightful quandary.  

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  1. James Voyles says

    November 20th, 2019 at 7:25 am

    I am so excited to read this book, at last, after its release, April 7, one day after my 80th birthday. So glad I’ve lived to see it! Bravo, Sallie; once again, your work has survived your editors! Congratulations.

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Watch Sallie

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Back on October 28th, 2008, I visited artist Linda Stein's studio in New York City and tried on a few of her handmade suits of armor.
On Memoir and My Writing Memoir/Writing History Workshops

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Rebecca Reynolds & Salie Bingham at SOMOS

Rebecca Reynolds & Salie Bingham at SOMOS

November 8th, 2024
This event was recorded November 1, 2024 in Taos, NM at SOMOS Salon & Bookshop by KCEI Radio, Red River/Taos and broadcast on November 8, 2024.
Taken by the Shawnee Reading

Taken by the Shawnee Reading

September 1st, 2024
This reading took place at The Church of the Holy Faith in Santa Fe, New Mexico in August of 2024.

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salliebingham avatar; Sallie Bingham @salliebingham ·
16 Jun 1934677677165732219

Spring is full of moods here in New Mexico... I keep waiting grumpily for a spell of warm, settled weather. But not my friends the ravens. This is the weather they adore. "My Friends the Ravens": https://buff.ly/a2YelNT #Birds #BirdWatching #Hiking #TheCityDifferent

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salliebingham avatar; Sallie Bingham @salliebingham ·
15 Jun 1934231912362467489

At the farmer’s market yesterday, a family band called High Lonesome Highway performed. I don’t know if they write their own music but the wailing heart-broken sounds of old mountain melodies brought #Kentucky here to the high desert https://buff.ly/mhDqow3 #SantaFeNM

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Sallie Bingham's latest is a captivating account of ancestor's ordeal
Pasatiempo, The Santa Fe New Mexican

“I felt she was with me” during the process of writing the book, Bingham says. “I felt I wasn’t writing anything that would have seemed to her false or unreal.”

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