I might not do it exactly as he does but I will try to get to all the letters of the alphabet over time.
I was contemplating to take Bill Bryson for this letter but he writes (or rather wrote) non-fiction books, and I decided to stick to non-fiction. But there are letters where you find many more authors and it is always going to be hard to decide for the one you like most.
Pearl S. Buck has always been a special author for me. She was probably one of the first "grown-up" authors, no, the very first "grown-up" author I ever read. And certainly the first Nobel Prize winner, maybe that's why I still like to read them.
Pearl S. Buck wrote a lot of books about China, where she grew up as the daughter of a missionary. She must have written at least a hundred but I only read a handful of them. However, I believe she was a brilliant writer and had a lot of stories to tell,
- "East Wind: West Wind" - 1930
- "The Good Earth" (House of Earth Trilogy #1) - 1931 - ILK
- "The First Wife and Other Stories" - 1933
- "Sons" (House of Earth Trilogy #2) - 1932
- "The Mother"- 1933
- "A House Divided" (House of Earth Trilogy #3) - 1935
- "The Exile" - 1936
- "The Patriot" - 1939
- "Portrait of a Marriage" - 1945
- "Pavilion of Women" - 1946
- "Peony" - 1948
- "Kinfolk" - 1949
- "Love and the Morning Calm" - 1951
She has also written a few non-fiction books:
- "My several worlds: A Personal Exile" - 1954
- "Imperial Woman" - 1956
- "A Bridge for Passing" - 1961
- "The Story Bible" - 1971
Facts about Pearl S. Buck:
Born 26 June 1892 Virginia, USA
Died 6 March 1973 (aged 80) Vermont, USA
Buried in Pennsylvania, USA
A 5¢ Great Americans series postage stamp was issued by the United States Postal Service
A statue of the author stands in front of the former residence at Nanjing University
She appears on the £10 note of the Bank of England.
Pearl S. Buck received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1938 "for her rich and truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China and for her biographical masterpieces".
I contribute to this page: Read the Nobels and you can find all my blogs about Nobel Prize winning authors and their books here.
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The Living Reed is the only Pearl S. Buck novel I've read, but I did really like it. And learned a lot about Korea, too.
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