In 2001 Bibi Gaston, grand daughter of Rosamund Pinchot, received a cardboard box filled with more than 1,500 pages of her grandmother's diary. Thus began Gaston's quest to tell the story of Pinchot and the tumultuous account of her life. Not until Gaston began to read the diaries did she realize just who Rosamond Pinchot was and what she might have meant to her family had she lived. "In hundreds of images, her look was timeless," Gaston writes. "They show her in silhouette against the Manhattan skyline, under Hollywood's fabulous houses of skylights, fishing in the streams of Pennsylvania and walking her dog on the Upper East Side as though it was yesterday. Not only was she a celebrity, she was also a remarkable sportswoman and equestrian. She had dined with the likes of Dorothy Parker, Sinclair Lewis and George Gershwin. So why had no one in my family ever talked about her or shared even a single detail of her life? Rosamond seemed to have slipped off the edge of the world. There are thousands of ways of vanishing; a family's silence is one of them.".