Pearl Buck

1938


 "for her rich and truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China and for her biographical masterpieces"

--The Nobel Foundation


Statistics:

U.S.A.

1892-1973

prize presentation

Biography:

 

Pearl Sydenstricker was raised in Chenchiang in eastern China by her Presbyterian missionary parents. Initially educated by her mother and a Chinese tutor, she was sent at 15 to a boarding school in Shanghai. Two years later she entered Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Lynchburg, Virginia, graduating in 1914 and remaining for a semester as an instructor in psychology. In May 1917 she married missionary John L. Buck; although later divorced and remarried, she retained the name Buck professionally. She returned to China and taught English literature in Chinese universities in 1925-30. During that time she briefly resumed studying in the United States at Cornell University, where she took her M.A. in 1926. She began contributing articles on Chinese life to American magazines in 1922.

Buck's first published novel, East Wind, West Wind (1930), was written aboard a ship headed for America. The Good Earth (1931), a poignant tale of a Chinese peasant and his slave-wife and their struggle upward, was a best-seller. The book, which won a Pulitzer Prize (1932), established Buck as an interpreter of the East to the West and was adapted for stage and screen. The Good Earth, widely translated, was followed by Sons (1932) and A House Divided (1935); the trilogy was published as The House of Earth (1935). Buck was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1938. From 1935 Buck lived in the United States. After World War II, in a move to aid illegitimate children of U.S. servicemen in Asian countries, she instituted the Pearl S. Buck Foundation (in 1967 she turned over to the foundation most of her earnings--more than $7,000,000).

Buck turned next to biography with lives of her father, Absalom Sydenstricker, Fighting Angel (1936), and her mother, Caroline, The Exile (1936). Her later novels include Dragon Seed (1942) and Imperial Woman (1956). She also published short stories, such as The First Wife and Other Stories . . . (1933), Far and Near (1947), and The Good Deed (1969); a nonfictional work, The Child Who Never Grew (1950), about her retarded daughter; and three works of autobiography, notably My Several Worlds (1954). She also wrote a number of children's books. Under the name John Sedges she published five novels unlike her others, including a best-seller, The Townsman (1945).

Encyclopedia Britannica

See also:
Pearl S. Buck Site
Pearl S. Buck International
Randolph-Macon Women's College
Pearl S. Buck Photo Collection


Bibliography:

 

 

 

 

 

 

East Wind: West Wind (1930)
The Good Earth (1931)
Sons (1932)
*Young Revolutionist (1932)
*First Wife (1933)
The Mother (1934)
A House Divided (1935)
*The Exile (1936)
*Fighting Angel (1936)
*This Proud Heart (1938)
*The Patriot (1939)
*Other Gods, An American Legend (1940)
*Stories for Little Children (c) (1940)
*Of Men and Women (1941)
*Today and Forever (1941)
*Chinese Childen Next Door (c) (1942)
Dragon Seed (1942)
*Freedom for All (1942)
*Asia and Democracy (1943)
The Promise (1943)
*Twenty-seven Stories (1943)
*Water-buffalo Children (c) (1943)
*Dragonfish (1944)
*The Spirit and the Flesh (1944)
*What America Means to Me (1944)
Portrait of a Marriage (1945)
*Talk About Russia with Masha Scott
Tell the People : Talks With James Yen About the Mass Educational Movement (1945)
*Yu Lan, Flying Boy of China (c) (1945)
Pavillion of Women (1946)
*The Angry Wife (1947)
*Far and Near (1947)
Peony (1948)
The Big Wave (c) (1948)
*American Argument
*The Bondmaid (1949)
Kinfolk (1949)
*The Long Love (1949)
The Child Who Never Grew (1950)
*One Bright Day (c) (1950)
*God's Men (1951)
*Bright Procession (1952)
*Hidden Flower (1952)
*Come, My Beloved (1953)
*The Man Who Changed China: The Story of Sun Yat-Sen (c) (1953)
*Voices in the House (1953)
*The Beech Tree (1954)
*Johnny Jack and His Beginnings (c) (1954)
*My Several Worlds (1954)
Imperial Woman (1956)
*Letter from Peking (1957)
*Command the Morning (1959)
*The Long Love (1959)
*Fourteen Stories (1961)
*A Bridge for Passing (1962)
*Hearts Come Home (1962)
*Satan Never Sleeps (1962)
The Living Reed (1963)
*The Big Fight (1964)
*Children for Adoption (1964)
*The Joy of Children (1964)
*Welcome Child (c) (1964)
Death in the Castle (1965)
*My Mother's House (1965)
*For Spacious Skys
*People of Japan (1966)
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John (c) (1967)
*The Time is Noon (1967)
*New Year (1968)
*The Good Deed (1969)
Three Daughters of Madame Liang (1969)
*China as I See It (1970)
*The Kennedy Women: A Personal Appraisal (1970)
Mandala: A Novel of India (1970)
*Chinese Storyteller (1971)
*A Gift for the Children (c) (1971)
*Pearl Buck's America (1971)
The Story Bible: The Old Testament (1971)
The Story Bible: The New Testament (1971)
*China Past and Present (1972)
*The Goddess Abides (1972)
*Once Upon a Christmas (1972)
*Pearl S. Buck's Oriental Cookbook (1972)
*All Under Heaven (1973)
*Mrs. Starling's Problem (1973)
*Pearl S. Buck's Book of Christmas (1974)
*The Rainbow (1974)
*Words of Love (1974)
*East and West: Stories (1975)
*Secrets of the Heart (1976)
Lovers and Other Stories (1977)
*The Woman Who Was Changed and Other Stories (1979)
*Old Demon (1982)
*All Men are Brothers
*American Unity and Asia
*China Flight
*China Sky
*Chinese Novel
*Christmas Miniature (c)
*The Christmas Mouse
*The Enemy
*A Field of Rice
*How it Happens: Talk About the German People, 1914-1933
*Journey for Life
*Letter from Peking
*Little Fox in the Middle (c)
*Mrs. Stoner and the Sea
*My Chinese Childhood
*A Pearl Buck Reader
*This Proud Heart
To My Daughters, With Love
*Fairy Tales of the Orient (c)
*Little Red (Short Stories)


Books about Pearl Buck:

Between Two Worlds: A Story About Pearl Buck (Barbara Mitchell)
Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography (Peter J. Conn)
Pearl S. Buck: The Final Chapter (Beverly E. Rizzon)
Pearl S. Buck (Kang Liao)
The Several Worlds of Pearl S. Buck (Elizabeth J. Lipscomb, et al.)

*out of print


Last updated: December 2003

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