Pearl S. Buck (1892–1973)
Author of The Good Earth
About the Author
Pearl S. Buck, June 26, 1892 - March 6, 1973 Pearl Sydenstricker Buck was an American author, best know for her novels about China. Buck was born on June 26, 1892, in Hillsboro, West Virginia, but as the daughter of Presbyterian missionaries she was taken to China in infancy. She received her early show more education in Shanghai, but returned to the United States to attend college, and graduated from Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Virginia in 1914. Buck became a university teacher there and married John Lossing Buck, an agricultural economist, in 1917. Buck and her husband both taught in China, and she published magazine articles about life there. Her first novel East Wind, West Wind was published in 1930. Buck achieved international success with The Good Earth, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1932. This story of a Chinese peasant family's struggle for survival was later made into a MGM film. Buck resigned from the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions after publishing an article that was critical of missionaries. She returned to the United States because of political unrest in China. Buck's novels during this period include Sons, A House Divided, and The Mother. She also wrote biographies of her father (Fighting Angel) and her mother (The Exile). She won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1938. During her career, Buck published over 70 books: novels, nonfiction, story collections, children's books, and translations from the Chinese. She also wrote under the pseudonym John Sedges. In the United States, Buck was active in the civil rights and women's rights movements. In 1942 she founded the East and West Association to promote understanding between Asia and the West. In 1949, Buck established Welcome House, the first international interracial adoption agency. In 1964, she established the Pearl S. Buck foundation to sponsor support for Amerasian children who were not considered adoptable. Pearl Buck died in Danbury, Vermont, on March 6, 1973. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by Pearl S. Buck
American Triptych: Three John Sedges Novels: The Long Love ; The Townsman; Voices in the House (1958) 79 copies
The Complete Woman: Selections from the Writings of Pearl S. Buck, Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature (1971) 30 copies
The Big Wave by Buck, Pearl S. (1986) Paperback — Author — 18 copies
Omnibus 11 copies
Eine kleine Weihnachtsgeschichte (5915 430) und andere Erzählungen um die Heilige Nacht. (1981) 7 copies
Novelas II 4 copies
Novelas. V 4 copies
Imperial Woman | Pavilion of Women 4 copies
Priče za malu djecu 3 copies
All Men Are Brothers Vol. 1 3 copies
The Big Wave 3 copies
Kinfolk, Part 1 3 copies
Imperial Woman (excerpt) Published in Omnibook Best-Seller Magazine October 1956 Issue (1956) 3 copies
Los premios Nobel de Literatura III 2 copies
℗La ℗famiglia dispersa: romanzo 2 copies
Orhideja 2 copies
My Several Worlds 2 copies
KIRIK ÜMİTLER 2 copies
Of men and women / by Pearl S. Buck 2 copies
Mis diversos mundos. 2 copies
Pearl S. Buck 2 copies
Altri Dei 2 copies
Novelas. III 2 copies
The Time is Noon / Peony / Imperial Woman / Dragon Seed / The Exile / Fighting Angel (1961) 2 copies
Portrait of a Marriage / The Promise 2 copies
The Decameron 1 copy
Ponosno srce 1 copy
Vzhodni zahodnik 1 copy
Opere 1 copy
Jezna žena 1 copy
Glasovi v hiši 1 copy
Casa de lut vol. I Tarina 1 copy
Orkide 1 copy
Sons / A House Divided / The Exile / The Patriot / Dragon Seed / Portrait of a Marriage / The Promise (1939) 1 copy
Moja svetova moje življenje 1 copy
Ženski paviljon 1 copy
Velka ljubezen 1 copy
Buck Pearl (Pearl Walsh) 1 copy
A széthulló család regény 1 copy
My Chinese childhood 1 copy
I fjr̃ran land 1 copy
Paviljon žena 1 copy
Muerte en el castillo 1 copy
Az ősi föld hazahív regény 1 copy
Peonía Novela 1 copy
El año nuevo 1 copy
HLe Iragazze di Madame Liang 1 copy
Východní vítr a Západní vítr 1 copy
Reader's Digest Auswahlbücher 57 - Das neue Jahr. Abgekartetes Spiel. Dr. Moores Krankenhaus. Die Brücke am Kwai (1969) 1 copy
Imperial Woman, Part 1 1 copy
The Hidden Flower [abridged] 1 copy
OBRAS SELECTAS PEARL S. BUCK 1 copy
BUC Puente de paso 1 copy
The Long Love, Part 1 1 copy
Vento Leste e Vento Oeste 1 copy
Para minhas filhas, com amor, Conselhos de mãe adotiva que toda mãe verdadeira gostaria de dar 1 copy
Der Drachenfisch Die berühmte Schriftstellerin erzählt die Geschichte einer Kinderfreunschaft 1 copy
A PRIMEIRA ESPOSA 1 copy
HIJOS La familia Wang 1 copy
Christmas Miniature 1 copy
Mandala 1 copy
The Mother 1 copy
The Long Love, Part 2 1 copy
Sous le même ciel 1 copy
Terre coréenne 1 copy
Time is Noon 1 copy
The First wife 1 copy
Il frutto mancato 1 copy
The Good Earth, Part 1 1 copy
The Good Earth, Part 2 1 copy
Pearl Buck. Impératrice de Chine : 'Imperial woman', traduit de l'américain par Lola Tranec. 19e édition (1956) 1 copy
Le Roi fantôme 1 copy
La Vie n'attend pas 1 copy
Es-tu le maître de l'aube ? 1 copy
La lettre de Pekin 1 copy
Le Peuple du Japon 1 copy
Novelas 1 copy
The CHINESE NOVEL. Nobel Lecture Delivered Before the Swedish Adacemy at Stockholm December 12, 1938. (1939) 1 copy
Maintenant et à jamais 1 copy
Mathew, Mark, Luke and John 1 copy
Un'eterna meraviglia 1 copy
The Exhile 1 copy
Moren 1 copy
Bambú 1 copy
Den Gode Jord VIII 1 copy
Cinque romanzi per ragazzi 1 copy
La promesa Otros dioses 1 copy
The Missionary's Wife 1 copy
Cloak and Dagger 1 copy
La Primera mujer de Se Yuan 1 copy
LOS PREMIOS NOBEL 1 copy
[Title missing] 1 copy
සරුබිමේ පෙරළිය 1 copy
පීකිං පෙම් පත 1 copy
පියොනි 1 copy
සරුබිමේ පුත්තු 1 copy
Pearl S. Buck - Novelas 1 copy
De Chinese roman 1 copy
Vlastenec 1 copy
THE EXILE. 1 copy
Mis mejores novelas cortas (Antiguos y modernos / Revolución / Inundación / A lo lejos y de cerca 1 copy
Bambuskottet 1 copy
Kinfolk, Part 2 1 copy
His Own Country 1 copy
Sølvsommerfuglen 1 copy
Noe å leve for 1 copy
Buck, Pearl S. Archive 1 copy
The New Year 1 copy
Can the Church Lead? 1 copy
Det bästas bokval: Flygplatsen / Målaren från Kreta / Det nya året / På västfronten intet nytt 1 copy
What America Means to Me 1 copy
O Patríota 1 copy
الأم 1 copy
ÄITI 1 copy
Ludzie w rozterce 1 copy
By Pearl S. Buck - Kinfolk: A Novel of China (Oriental Novels of Pearl S. Buck) (New Ed) (1996) 1 copy
L'amour demeure 1 copy
Synir trúboðanna 1 copy
Í huliðsbæ 1 copy
Gersemi 1 copy
Sh̲ne Roman 1 copy
Sons House of Earth #2 1 copy
The House of Earth Trilogy 1 copy
Orgullo de corazón novela 1 copy
Essay on myself 1 copy
සෙනෙහෙබර රූත් 1 copy
Pearl Buck. La Mère : Traduit de l'anglais par Germaine Delamain. Préface de Louis Gillet,... 287e édition (1948) 1 copy
Pavillon des femmes 1 copy
Pearl S. Buck,... La Terre chinoise. 3. La Famille dispersée : Roman traduit par S. Campaux (1950) 1 copy
Østenvind ... Vestenvind 1 copy
Preconceito Racial 1 copy
Mãe 1 copy
Une femme qui avait change 1 copy
La gran dama Novela 1 copy
Mujeres sin cielo 1 copy
Mándalá 1 copy
A grande luta, Pearl S. Buck 1 copy
Le opere 1 copy
A Bridge for Passing 1 copy
Aún es mediodía 1 copy
Fiabe orientali 1 copy
A House Divided 1 copy
Associated Works
The Young Folks' Shelf of Books, Volume 04: Just Around the Corner (1962) — Contributor — 176 copies
An American Album: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Harper's Magazine (2000) — Contributor — 146 copies, 1 review
101 Years' Entertainment: The Great Detective Stories 1841-1941 (1941) — Contributor — 111 copies, 1 review
Women's Magazines, 1940-1960: Gender Roles and the Popular Press (1998) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
Reader's Digest Condensed Books 1957 v03: The Lady / A Houseful of Love / The Three Faces of Eve / Letter from Peking / The FBI Story / Mission to Borneo (1957) — Author — 31 copies
Reader's Digest Condensed Books 1955 v01: The Reason Why / "The China I Knew" / My Brother's Keeper / Good Morning, Miss Dove / The Darby Trial (1955) — Contributor — 30 copies, 1 review
The Best of Both Worlds: An Anthology of Stories for All Ages (1968) — Contributor — 25 copies, 1 review
Reader's Digest Best Sellers 1970: Death Committee | Three Daughters of Madame Liang | Once Upon an Island | The Wine and the Music (1970) — Author — 20 copies
My Most Inspiring Moment: Encounters with Destiny Relived by Thirty-Eight Best-Selling Authors (1965) 12 copies
Great American Short Stories: O. Henry Memorial Prize Winning Stories, 1919-1934 (1935) — Contributor — 11 copies, 1 review
Reader's Digest Auswahlbucher 172 : Der Unterhändler. Ostwind-Westwind. Gefährliches Erbe. Manchmal geschehen noch Wunder (1990) 6 copies
Voiceless India — Introduction — 5 copies
Reader's Digest Condensed Books: Lobo / The Century of the Surgeon / Letter from Peking / Bon Voyage / The Nymph and the Lamp (1950) — Author — 3 copies
The Big Wave [1961 film] — Original novel — 2 copies
RDCBLP v048 Polsinney Harbour | Christmas Day in the Morning | The Whale of the Victoria Cross | Winter Night (1985) — Author — 2 copies
Good Children Don't Kill, A Place In The Woods, A Town Like Alice, Snatch, The New Year (1969) 2 copies
Reader's Digest Condensed Books: Farewell to the King • The Thirteenth Moon • The Three Daughters of Madame Liang • Florence Nightingale • The Witness (1971) — Author — 2 copies
Mia cugina Rachele - Il cavallo di legno - Vita meravigliosa delle foche - Il fiore nascosto — Contributor — 2 copies
Det Bästas Bokval (1958) vol 010 : Ingen tid att älska, Evas tre ansikten; Mina skilda världar; Arvtagaren — Contributor — 2 copies
Het Beste Boek 44: Het nieuwe jaar / De wortels van het kwaad / Scotts laatste expeditie / De zondebok / Broeders van de zee (1969) — Author — 1 copy, 1 review
Mine Verdener / To Soldater / Digby / Pashaen på Gudindeøen / Det Store X — Contributor — 1 copy
Coronet, April 1941 — Contributor — 1 copy
Het Beste Boek 55: Het kind van de rekening / De zomer van de rode wolf / De drie dochters van Madame Liang / Geen leven zonder droom (1972) 1 copy, 1 review
Los premios Nobel de literatura. Los padres prodigos / Voces secretas / La senhorita Smith-Tellefsen — Contributor — 1 copy
Die Töchter der Madame Liang, Der geschenkte Gaul, Die blauen Blumen der Catstreet, Papillon (1972) — Contributor — 1 copy
Reader's Digest 4 in 1 The New Year etc. — Contributor — 1 copy
Biblioteca de Selecciones. CARTA DE PEKIN-HISTORIA DEL FBI-ANNAPURNA-LA SEÑORA DE ANDRES JACKSON. 1 copy
The Ethnic Image in Modern American Literature, 1900-1950, Volumes 1-2 (1984) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Buck, Pearl S.
- Legal name
- Buck, Pearl Sydenstricker
- Other names
- Zhenzhu,Sai
Sedges, John
Sydenstricker, Pearl Comfort (birth name) - Birthdate
- 1892-06-26
- Date of death
- 1973-03-06
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Randolph-Macon Woman's College (AB|1914 ∙ Classics)
Cornell University (MA|1926) - Occupations
- novelist
teacher - Organizations
- American Academy of Arts and Letters (1936)
Presbyterian Church in the United States
Kappa Delta
Founder East and West Association (1942)
Founder Welcome House (1949)
Founder Pearl S. Buck Foundation (1964) - Awards and honors
- Nobel Prize (Literature, 1938)
Pulitzer Prize (1932) - Relationships
- Spurling, Hilary (biographer)
- Short biography
- Pearl Sydenstricker was the daughter of Southern Presbyterian missionaries. She spent much of her life in China, though she graduated from Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Lynchburg, Virginia. From childhood she was bilingual in English and Chinese. She married an agricultural economist named John Lossing Buck in 1917, and together they lived in rural Anhwei province, an impoverished area. Her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Good Earth, and other stories set in China are based on what she learned while living there. In 1935, after divorcing John Buck, Pearl married publisher Richard Walsh. In 1938, Buck became the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize in literature. She is buried at Green Hills Farm, in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
- Cause of death
- cancer (lung)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Hillsboro, West Virginia, USA
- Places of residence
- Zhenjiang, China
Nanjing, China
Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA
Ithaca, New York, USA - Place of death
- Danby, Vermont, USA
- Burial location
- Green Hills Farm, Perkasie, Pennsylvania, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
March 2025: Pearl S. Buck in Monthly Author Reads (March 2025)
Found: Children's Book about Giant Wave in Japan in Name that Book (December 2022)
Reviews
This book was...exasperating. I didn't agree with most of what the characters did and got frustrated because I wanted to argue with them and tell Wang Lung how terrible he was. "Wow, I can't wait to get married so I can lay in bed and my wife can do everything for me!" What a way to introduce a protagonist. And he took the pearls. What a piece of shit.
Also, I want justice for O-Lan! She was visibly dying of a cancer for THREE YEARS before anyone bothered calling a doctor?? They never would show more have been successful without her, and that's the thanks she got?! What a terrible end, even for a "worthless slave." Ugh.
Apparently this is the first book in a trilogy, but I don't think I can get myself this worked up two more times.
Other things:
"Well, and" before EVERY piece of dialogue.
"THE LAND"
"With the passing of the flame out of him he was suddenly cold with an age and he was old man. Nevertheless, he was fond of her....and more and more his love for her was the love of father for daughter." Gross.
He. Took. The. Pearls. show less
Also, I want justice for O-Lan! She was visibly dying of a cancer for THREE YEARS before anyone bothered calling a doctor?? They never would show more have been successful without her, and that's the thanks she got?! What a terrible end, even for a "worthless slave." Ugh.
Apparently this is the first book in a trilogy, but I don't think I can get myself this worked up two more times.
Other things:
"Well, and" before EVERY piece of dialogue.
"THE LAND"
"With the passing of the flame out of him he was suddenly cold with an age and he was old man. Nevertheless, he was fond of her....and more and more his love for her was the love of father for daughter." Gross.
He. Took. The. Pearls. show less
Pearl Buck is one of those authors I've been meaning to read for years. I finally did, and I'm glad I started with The Good Earth. The story seems both familiar and strange. The book addresses universal themes of family conflict, poverty and wealth, wisdom and folly, love and hate, but its setting in provincial China in the early 20th century is very different. It was jarring for the female sex to be referred to as “slaves”, yet that's how the women were treated even in wealthy show more households.
One of the most curious passages in the book is Wang Lung's encounter with Christian missionaries in the city. They provide much-needed assistance for the poor when conditions are bad, but seem to abandon them to their fate when conditions are at their worst. They distribute literature that the uneducated Wang Lung can't understand. He can't read the letters, and the pictures don't make any sense to him. The family puts the papers to good use, but not in the way the missionaries intended. Knowing that Pearl Buck was the daughter of missionaries, I can't help but see this as a commentary on the futility of the work of Western missionaries.
The story is well-suited for audio, and Anthony Heald's reading is delightful. I'm not sure I would have liked the book quite as well if I had read it rather than listened to it. Warmly recommended. show less
One of the most curious passages in the book is Wang Lung's encounter with Christian missionaries in the city. They provide much-needed assistance for the poor when conditions are bad, but seem to abandon them to their fate when conditions are at their worst. They distribute literature that the uneducated Wang Lung can't understand. He can't read the letters, and the pictures don't make any sense to him. The family puts the papers to good use, but not in the way the missionaries intended. Knowing that Pearl Buck was the daughter of missionaries, I can't help but see this as a commentary on the futility of the work of Western missionaries.
The story is well-suited for audio, and Anthony Heald's reading is delightful. I'm not sure I would have liked the book quite as well if I had read it rather than listened to it. Warmly recommended. show less
"Would he keep himself separate, dedicated to a faith that made him solitary among whatever people he lived, or would he pour the stream of his life into the rich ocean of all human life about him?"
Many of my favorite books are ones with a story that pulls you in and holds you firmly in its grip while teaching you important stuff. “Peony” did both of these things.
This book is historical fiction, romance, and religious philosophy all wrapped into one beautiful package.
It’s the story show more about a prominent Jewish family living in China in the 1800s, and specifically about the love that one of their bondmaids has for the son she was bonded with. You learn a lot about the Chinese and Jewish cultures and people living during this time. In fact, it’s the first book with an explanation of the Jewish plight that makes total sense to me.
It’s not a typical romance, but it’s an authentic one given the cultures and norms of the time period coupled with real love. You’ll need at least one box of tissues!
I couldn’t put the book down and when I was done, I missed Peony. She’s an amazing character that will live with me forever.
My only complaint is the major shift in the writing style toward the end of the book. It’s almost as though Pearl realized (or was told) that the book was going to be too long if she kept up with the earlier depth and detail. With this shift, the story became more summarial with Pearl glossing over major happenings and many years very quickly without the emotional depth that made the rest of the book so amazing.
Nevertheless, Peony made my all-time favorites list and I highly recommend it to historical fiction buffs, especially those who love being pulled into an emotional story! show less
Many of my favorite books are ones with a story that pulls you in and holds you firmly in its grip while teaching you important stuff. “Peony” did both of these things.
This book is historical fiction, romance, and religious philosophy all wrapped into one beautiful package.
It’s the story show more about a prominent Jewish family living in China in the 1800s, and specifically about the love that one of their bondmaids has for the son she was bonded with. You learn a lot about the Chinese and Jewish cultures and people living during this time. In fact, it’s the first book with an explanation of the Jewish plight that makes total sense to me.
It’s not a typical romance, but it’s an authentic one given the cultures and norms of the time period coupled with real love. You’ll need at least one box of tissues!
I couldn’t put the book down and when I was done, I missed Peony. She’s an amazing character that will live with me forever.
My only complaint is the major shift in the writing style toward the end of the book. It’s almost as though Pearl realized (or was told) that the book was going to be too long if she kept up with the earlier depth and detail. With this shift, the story became more summarial with Pearl glossing over major happenings and many years very quickly without the emotional depth that made the rest of the book so amazing.
Nevertheless, Peony made my all-time favorites list and I highly recommend it to historical fiction buffs, especially those who love being pulled into an emotional story! show less
A strain of crazed, self-righteous fanaticism runs throughout Pearl S. Buck's work. In her better novels, such as The Good Earth, her storytelling skills are so strong that this fault, as I see it, fades into the background. But Dragon Seed is not one of her better works. It amounts to little more than wartime propaganda. And the constant pleading interspersed with revenge fantasies at times makes it an ugly work. Yes, China was undergoing a ruthless Japanese invasion and occupation. And show more Buck self identified with the Chinese. So, in that sense, it is all understandable. But the ferocity of the tone of the book, its lack of subtlety and its constant waving of the bloody flag will forever doom Dragon Seed to nothing more than a mere reflection of its times.
The story itself revolves around a fictionalized depiction of the Rape of Nanking in 1937, although the novel was not published until 1942, just as the United States was entering World War II following the attack on Pearl Harbor. That fact provides the only sense of hope in the story, that after four years of Japanese occupation China now has allies who promise that the "tunnel may be dark and long, but at the end there is light." The fate of the novel's characters reflect this state of affairs, for everything is left unresolved at book's end. The main and final struggle is yet to be fought.
Dragon Seed is bleak, heavy-handed effort. And it reveals Buck as something of a harridan. Her novels and her personal philosophy seem driven with her confirmed belief that she was in the right, that China's only appropriate future was the one she felt it must follow. However much she may have come to criticize the American and British missionary efforts in China, she retained that same zealous attitude, just for a slightly different set of values. She thought herself the defender against anti-Asian bigotry. How ironic that contemporary readers of her work, cut from the same desire to reshape the world in the 21st century image of Western "appropriateness" now condemn her efforts as racist filled stereotypes. There is something instructive in that. People who write books to please contemporary audiences and announce their own virtue often have their own voices turned against them in subsequent generations. Perhaps a fate that also awaits those so criticizing Buck today. show less
The story itself revolves around a fictionalized depiction of the Rape of Nanking in 1937, although the novel was not published until 1942, just as the United States was entering World War II following the attack on Pearl Harbor. That fact provides the only sense of hope in the story, that after four years of Japanese occupation China now has allies who promise that the "tunnel may be dark and long, but at the end there is light." The fate of the novel's characters reflect this state of affairs, for everything is left unresolved at book's end. The main and final struggle is yet to be fought.
Dragon Seed is bleak, heavy-handed effort. And it reveals Buck as something of a harridan. Her novels and her personal philosophy seem driven with her confirmed belief that she was in the right, that China's only appropriate future was the one she felt it must follow. However much she may have come to criticize the American and British missionary efforts in China, she retained that same zealous attitude, just for a slightly different set of values. She thought herself the defender against anti-Asian bigotry. How ironic that contemporary readers of her work, cut from the same desire to reshape the world in the 21st century image of Western "appropriateness" now condemn her efforts as racist filled stereotypes. There is something instructive in that. People who write books to please contemporary audiences and announce their own virtue often have their own voices turned against them in subsequent generations. Perhaps a fate that also awaits those so criticizing Buck today. show less
Lists
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1940s (1)
Sonlight Books (1)
4th Grade Books (1)
Precious People (1)
BitLife (1)
Which house? (1)
1950s (1)
Female Author (1)
Unread books (1)
Fiction For Men (1)
Asia (1)
Sense of place (1)
A Novel Cure (1)
Christmas Books (1)
Women's Stories (1)
. (1)
1930s (2)
1970 Club (1)
Down on the Farm (1)
Carole's List (1)
Shelf 101 (1)
Ambleside Books (1)
Reading Globally (1)
Awards
You May Also Like
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Statistics
- Works
- 437
- Also by
- 83
- Members
- 37,160
- Popularity
- #492
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 678
- ISBNs
- 1,159
- Languages
- 30
- Favorited
- 78
















































