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People named Pearl Buck

Below are 38 people with the first name Pearl and the last name Buck. Try the Buck Family page if you can't find a particular Collaborative Biography in your family tree.

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38 Pearl Buck Biographies

Pearl S. Buck
Pearl S. Buck, the author of more than 85 books and winner of the Nobel and Pulitzer Prizes in literature, died yesterday at her home in Denby, Vt., after a long illness. Mrs. Buck, who was 80 years old; had recently completed a children's book and was at work om two novels, one of which, “The Red Earth,” deals with the modern‐day descendants of the characters in her best‐known novel, “The Good Earth.” She was able to continue working despite failing health, which caused her to be hospitalized several times in the last year and to undergo surgery for the removal of her gall bladder last September. Mrs. Buck is survived by a daughter, Carol; nine adopted children, Janice, Richard, John, Edgar, Jean, Henriette, Theresa, Chieko and Johanna; a sister, Mrs. Grace Yaukey, and 12 grandchildren. According to her wishes, the funeral service will be private. In a tribute to Mrs. Buck, President Nixon said yesterday that she was “a human bridge between the civilizations of the East and West.” In a reference to the fact that Mrs. Buck spent almost all of the first 40 years of her life in China and devoted much of her writing to Chinese subjects, Mr. Nixon said: “It is fitting that Pearl Buck lived to see two peoples she loved so much draw closer together during her last years. ... With simple eloquence she translated her personal love for the people and culture of China into a rich literary heritage, treasured by Asians and Westerners alike. She lived a long, life as artist, wife, mother, and philanthropist.” Although Mrs. Buck's love for the Chinese people was enduring, she was persona non grata with that country's current leaders. Recently she was turned down in her efforts to be admitted to China because, Chinese authorities said, her works have “for a long time taken an attitude of distortion, smear and vilification toward the people of China and their leaders.” Mrs. Buck, who rarely minced words, was once asked by ari interviewer, “Why do you write so many books?” “Why not?” she replied, with a touch of irritation in her voice. “I'm a writer.” Wave of Resentment For the strong‐willed, highly opinionated Mrs. Buck, winner of a Pulitizer Prize and the only American woman Nobel Laureate for literature, the explanation was as simple as that. “When I say I'm a working writer, I accent ‘working,’” she said. Mrs. Buck was indeed a prolific writer. Her first novel, “East Wind: West Wind,” was not published until 1930, when she was 38 years old, but by her 80th birthday in 1972 she had published more than 85 novels and collections of short stories and essays, and more than 25 volumes still awaited publication. She was the most translated of all American authors. “Of course, one pays the price for being prolific,” Mrs. Buck said in an interview for this article in 1969. “I sometimes feel quite guilty for being so, and Heaven knows the literary Establishment can't forgive me for it, nor for the fact that my books sell. With some people, that's suspect, you know.” Mrs. Buck referred, as she was often wont to do throughout her lengthy and profitable career, to the disdain with which many critics looked upon her. Most of them welcomed her second novel, “The Good Earth,” which became one of the most phenomenally popular books of the century, but there was much resentment when it was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1931. Her detractors argued that the Pulitzer is supposed to be given to a distinctly American work, by an American writer, and that “The Good Earth,” about Chinese peasants, was written by a woman who had lived most of her life in China. When Mrs. Buck was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1938, it was fashionable in literary circles to complain that if any American woman was entitled to a Nobel, it was Willa Cather, not Pearl Buck. “Above all,” Mrs. Buck said, “so many writers and critics nave seemed to be jealous of me not simply because my books are popular, or that the Book‐of‐the‐Month Club has distributed a dozen of them, but because I write them swiftly. It's true, I do. It took me just two months to write ‘The Good Earth.’ But what must not be forgotten is that those agony‐filled two months were devoted to writing words on paper. The novel took shape in my mind over perhaps 10 years.” While busily turning out an average of two volumes a year, on an almost daily writing regime that began at 8 A.M. and ended at 1 P.M, Mrs. Buck managed to care for her mentally r******* daughter Carol and nine adopted children, while at the same time taking an active interest in projects for the aid of mentally r******* children, the placement for adoption of children of mixed blood, and the betterment of international relations. Involved as she seemingly was in the lives of other people, Mrs. Buck possessed a certain air of detachment and, as she put it, she was “a solitary person, an intellectual loner.” She said that she actually liked people, “but I prefer their cornpany only in small doses; have expected so much from so many people, and I have been so often disappointed.” If she viewed others with cool detachment, it was also true that Mrs. Buck believed the feeling was mutual. “Somehow I have always been an object, rather than a person,” she said. “As a child, I was white with yellow hair and blue eyes in a country where everyone knew the proper color of eyes and hair was black, and skin was brown. I can remember my Chinese friends bringing their friends to look at me because I was different. By the time I came to this country I was different again. I was already what people call famous. People came to see me as they would an object, not a person.” Mrs, Buck was the product of two cultures, which enabled her to become what she called “mentally bifocal.” She loved China and the Chinese and came to be equally devoted to America and Americans although she never hesitated to criticize both cultures She wrote an active member of the AncientFaces community, Amanda S. Stevenson a nice letter in the 1950's.
Pearl Buck of TX was born circa 1948. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Pearl (Obrien) Buck.
Pearl Buck of Ripon, San Joaquin County, CA was born on June 13, 1911, and died at age 83 years old in April 1995.
Pearl I Buck of Santa Monica, Los Angeles County, CA was born on February 8, 1892, and died at age 96 years old on February 10, 1988.
Pearl Buck of Portland, Multnomah County, OR was born on October 21, 1926, and died at age 69 years old on November 23, 1995.
Pearl Buck of Ogden, Weber County, Utah was born on April 13, 1898, and died at age 89 years old in October 1987.
Pearl Buck of Alamogordo, Otero County, NM was born on September 27, 1914, and died at age 85 years old on June 24, 2000.
Pearl H Buck was born on March 23, 1915, and died at age 87 years old on November 11, 2002. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Pearl H Buck.
Pearl M Buck of Sequim, Clallam County, WA was born on April 9, 1905, and died at age 88 years old on May 19, 1993.
Pearl Buck of Kennewick, Benton County, Washington was born on September 14, 1887, and died at age 89 years old in November 1976.
Pearl Buck of Crosby, Divide County, ND was born on October 11, 1916, and died at age 87 years old on August 2, 2004.
Pearl Lee Buck of Waller, Harris County, Texas was born on February 13, 1925, and died at age 84 years old on November 17, 2009.
Pearl Josephine Buck of Waxahachie, Ellis County, Texas was born on September 28, 1929, and died at age 77 years old on March 29, 2007.
Pearl Buck of Kingston, Marshall County, OK was born on September 17, 1882, and died at age 85 years old on November 15, 1967.
Pearl Buck of Gordon, Douglas County, Wisconsin was born on May 9, 1896, and died at age 77 years old in March 1974.
Pearl Buck of Viola, Vernon County, Wisconsin was born on August 27, 1896, and died at age 81 years old in February 1978.
Pearl Buck of Decatur, Macon County, Illinois was born on June 14, 1886, and died at age 87 years old in December 1973.
Pearl Buck of Pensacola, Escambia County, FL was born on November 14, 1913, and died at age 86 years old on April 23, 2000.
Pearl Buck of Lafayette, Tippecanoe County, Indiana was born on August 3, 1890, and died at age 83 years old in June 1974.
Pearl M Buck was born on May 30, 1916, and died at age 75 years old on October 15, 1991. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Pearl M Buck.
Pearl F Buck of Akron, Summit County, Ohio was born on June 24, 1921, and died at age 88 years old on February 4, 2010.
Pearl L Buck of Tabor City, Columbus County, NC was born on October 10, 1915, and died at age 80 years old on September 11, 1996.
Pearl Buck of Burnsville, Yancey County, North Carolina was born on March 22, 1879, and died at age 100 years old in November 1979.
Pearl Buck of Charleston, Kanawha County, West Virginia was born on June 28, 1909, and died at age 76 years old in October 1985.
Pearl A Buck of Lewisburg, Greenbrier County, WV was born on April 29, 1904, and died at age 92 years old on February 1, 1997.
Pearl Buck of Lakeland, Polk County, Florida was born on October 7, 1901, and died at age 71 years old in November 1972.
Pearl Buck of Charleston, Kanawha County, West Virginia was born on September 15, 1894, and died at age 72 years old in December 1966.
Pearl F Buck of Courtland, Southampton County, VA was born on October 13, 1923, and died at age 76 years old on April 19, 2000.
Pearl E Buck of Patton, Cambria County, PA was born on February 16, 1908, and died at age 92 years old on March 12, 2000.
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