Literary Works Of Pearl S. Buck

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Literary Worksof Pearl S. BuckCategoriesAn Appeal to California, 1944Articles & Essays (Asia magazinepartially represented to date)An Artist in a World of Science, 1958And Yet—Jesus Christ!, 1932AutobiographyThe Angel Gabriel, 1971BiographyAre American Women Ready for Today?, 1943Book ReviewsAre We Losing Free India’s Friendship?, 1948BroadcastsArms for China’s Democracy, 1938Collected FictionArt and the Child, 1947CommentaryArthur Murray Students Dance ThatChildren May LiveDialoguesExcerpted Compilations &Reader’s Digest Condensed BooksFilm and TelevisionForewords/Introductions/PrefacesJuvenile FictionJuvenile CollectionsLetters (published)Non-FictionNovelsArticle in Harpers Bazaar, April 1942(became part 1 of “Children and theWorld” in What America Means to Me)Article in Randolph-Macon Women’sCollege Alumnae Bulletin, 1943Children and the World, 1943(combination of an article from 1942& 2 speeches from 1943)Children Are What You Make Them, 1936Children for Adoption, 1964Children of the World’s FutureThe Children Waiting: the ShockingScandal of Adoption, 1955 (also publishedas Must We Have Orphanages?)The Children We Left Behind, 1952Children’s Crusade for Children, 1940China, 1970 (expanded from talk to Americanservicemen set to go to China in World War II)China against Japan, 1936China and Federal Union, 1942As a Reader Sees It, 1947China and the Foreign Chinese, 1932Asiatic Problems, 1942 (revised versionof Tinder for Tomorrow)China and the West, 1970 (written 1933)China Faces the Future, 1943At Home in the World, 1942The China Front and the Future of Asia:Controversial Viewpoints, 1943PlaysAt Home: My World of Home, 1965(also titled At Home With Pearl Buck)PoetryThe Atmosphere of Education, 1948China Lost And Found, 1972SerialsAway with Garbage Pails (original titleof Don’t Throw Away the Best Part)The China of the Future, 1933Beauty in China, 1924China Speaks to America, 1943Short StoriesSpeeches & LecturesTranslationsBirth Control, 1935The Birth of Jesus, 1971Articles & EssaysAbout WomenAccount of the Nanking Incident, 1927 (writtenfor the Presbyterian Mission Board)Act As if You Had No Prejudice At All—SoonYou Will Have None, 1948Advice to Novelists, 1935Adoption Information for Reader’s DigestAdoptive ParentsAlice Nash, 1950The Bomb: The End of the World, 1959The Bomb: Did We Have To Drop It?, 1959The Bomb: Can We Survive the Bomb?, 1959Books about Americans for Peoplein Asia to Read, 1942Breaking the Barriers of Race and Prejudice,1942Brief Note for Coronet Magazine, 1942Can England Trust Us?, 1943 (laterpublished as Can the English Trust Us?)Can the Church Be Religious?, 1943China in the Mirror of Her Fiction, 1930China ReliefChina: Still the Good Earth, 1949China the Eternal, 1925China to America, 1944China Today, 1970China Wins, 1938China Works to Win, 1939China, the Unconquerable, 1932China’s Gifts to Tomorrow, 1943Chinese-American Relations, 1963(combination of a memo to executives of theEast and West Association & a speech on anunrecorded occasion, both from 1943)Can the Church Lead?, 1943 (pamphlet)The Chinese Attitude Towards Graft, 1935 (alsopublished as Wise Chinese)Center of New Life, 1943Chinese Child, 1942American Imperialism in the Making, 1945The Challenge of Our Times to LiberalEducation, 1951Chinese Incident, 1942American Unity, 1942The Changing War, 1943Americans All, Except, 1943The Chasm, 1963The Chinese Mind and India,1942Americans in Distress, 1947The Changing Relationships BetweenMen and Women, 1962 (revised versionof Wanted: Real Women)America Speaks to ChinaAmerican-Asian Children, 1964American CityAmerica’s Gunpowder Women, 1939America’s Medieval Women, 1938America’s Position in Music and Art, 1911America’s Town Meeting, 1942An American Looks at America, 1937An American Looks at the USSRAn American Looks at Russia, 1943The Child from Nowhere(Once Upon a Christmas), 1962The Child Who Never Grew, 1950The Children America Forgot, 1967Chinese Literature in Today’s World, 1946The Chinese Student Mind, 1924Chinese War Lords, 1933Chinese Women, 1931Chinese Women, 1943Chinese-American Relations, 1970(combination of a speech on an unrecordedoccasion and a confidential memo toexecutives of the East and West Association,both 1943, published in China As I See It)Christmas, 1940Pearl S. Buck International 520 Dublin Road, Perkasie, PA 18944 215-249-0100 pearlsbuck.org

Christmas Away from Home (submitted, notsold)Equal Rights by Amendment, 1943Impressions, 1944Christmas Day in the Morning, 1960Equality, 1943In China, Too, 1923Essay on Life, 1971In Memorium (in Tung-li Yuan tribute book),1967A Christmas True StoryChristmas Verities, 1956Colored-White Relations is Central War Theme,1942Come In, Mary, 1965Coming of Jesus, 1971Comment for American Magazine, 1942Comment on Gyandev, 1943Comment on ‘Prelude to War,’ 1943Comment on Race Prejudice in Asia, 1947Commentary on LynchingCommunism in China, 1928Conclusion: East and West, 1945Conflict and Cooperationacross the Pacific Today, 1935The Creative Mind at Work, 1935The Creative Spirit in Modern China, 1934(2 parts)Crusade, 1935The Exile’s Gift, 1940The Family in a World at War, 1942Father Unknown (Dear Son), 1953Fiction and the Front Page, 1936Fiction Versus Biography, c. 1937Fifty Years in the Training School is anHonorable Record, 1948Films and People in China, 1942Films for Neighbors, 1950Food for China, 1947For American Men and Women, 1941For a People’s Peace, 1942For the Victims, 1939The Foreign Chinese, 1932Foreigners Under Fire, 1937–38 (2 parts)Free China Gets to Work, 1939Freedom, 1943 (previously published asFreedom, East and West)In Search of a New Book, 1935In Search of Readers, 1950In Search of Teachers, 1956In the Midst of War, 1943 (used as introductionto What America Means to Me)India, 1948India Will Resist, 1942The Innocent, 1953Insecurity Breeds Hatred, 1945Intellects (a comparison between Asia andAmerica)Interpretation of China to the West, 1933An Interview with My Adopted Daughter, 1946Introducing America to India, 1946Introducing China, 1942Introduction to the United States, 1939It Takes Courage, 1948Freedom, East and West, 1942(later published as Freedom)ItalyThe Dark Shadow (Race Prejudice), 1943Freedom for All, 1941 (later published inexpanded version as The Heart of Democracy)James Yen, World Citizen, 1947The Darkest Hour in China’s History, 1944Freedom for India Now!, 1941A Debt to Dickens, 1936The Freedom to Be Free, 1943Japanese Americans, 1942The Delights of LearningThe Friendly Homes of Bucks County, 1961Democracy and the Negro, 1941 (also publishedas Freedom for All)Friends and Enemies of China, 1936Do You Want Your Children to be Tolerant?,1947The Future of the White Man in the Far East,1940A Cry for the Deserted, 1966Dark AgeDoes World Government MeanMore Government?, 1947Don’t Throw Away the Best Part, 1942(originally titled Away with Garbage Pails)Dragon by the Tail, 1938A Dream Comes True (written for PSBI),undatedA Dream for Danby, 1971The Early Chinese Novel, 1931East and West, 1943 [speech for GretchenGreen]From the Wisdom of Pearl S. Buck, 1959Garden to Order, 1963The Geography of Hunger, 1952The Giants are Gone, 1936God Becomes a Convenience, 1936The Good People of China, 1949The Good People of Japan, 1949Growing Up in ChinaHarry Holt (submitted, unsold)He Who Lives, Wins, 1939East and West, 1945 [American Mercury]The Heart of Democracy, 1942 (expandedversion of Freedom for All)East and West—Are We Different?,1970 (written 1933)A Higher Nationalism, 1933The East and West Association, 1943Historic Basis of Friendship, 1971A Home for Johnny, 1961East and West: Can They Meet? (see The RaceBarrier—That Must Be Destroyed)Easter 1933, 1933Education for Life in Our WorldEducation for Victory, 1944Education for World Understanding, 1952The Effect of Prejudice Upon the Individual,1957The Elementary Teacher is a Champion of theLess Fortunate Child, 1952The Emotional Chinese, 1926The Emotional Nature of the Chinese, 1926The Homemaker, 1957How I Feel About America, 1970How Real Allies Can Find Each Other, 1942How to Make a Good World, 1963I Am a Tree Farmer, 1962I Am the Better Woman for Having My TwoBlack Children, 1972I Visit Tibet’s Dalai Lama, 1965Japan Loses the War, 1938Japanese Children, 1953The Joy of Children, 1965Labor Reports, 1945The Land and the People of China, 1948Land of the Noble Free, 1943The Lay Mind at Bay, 1951Layman’s Mission Report, 1932Let the Children Live, 1951Let Them Have Reality, 1949Let’s Choose to LiveA Letter About Life, 1964Letter from AbroadA Letter from Pearl Buck, 1943Letter to Certain Young Women in Japan, 1950Letter to Germany, 1946Letter to a Girl (sold but unpublished)Letter to Kappa Delta, 1948Letter to Korea 1962, 1963Letters from Japan, 1947Lewis Mumford’s Road to War, 1940Like and Unlike in East and West, 1935Lin Yutang, 1930s ?Listen to the People, United Nations!, 1947Literature and Life, 1938Living Side by SideLove and Marriage (sold, unpublished)I Speak Out About China (submitted, unsold,destroyed at PSB’s request, 1961)Loyalty, 1952The Importance of Books, 1939Make It Freedom’s War, 1942(also published as The Changing War)The Importance of Reading andof Libraries in my Life, 1964Madame Pandit, 1947The Man Who Showed China the Vision, 1944Pearl S. Buck International 520 Dublin Road, Perkasie, PA 18944 215-249-0100 pearlsbuck.org

Manners and Civilization, 1942Marriage and Family Living, 1942Marriage is Different Today, 1960The Meaning of India, 1943Men as Beasts, 1967Message for India, 1949Message on Sigrid Undset’s Death, 1949Message to the Alumnae, 1939Message to the Inter-American Conferencefor Democracy and Freedom, 1950New York Times and Herald-TribuneStatement, 1942Peoples’ Manifesto, 1943Nineteen Stockings by the Chimney Piece, 1963The Plain People of China, 1941No Place to Hide, 1954No Union Without China, 1941Nobody Needs to Starve, 1949Not Quite Too Late, 1943Not Ready for Victory, 1943Note on the Activities of the East and WestAssociation, 1943Message to Japan, 1958A Note on the Price of Rice and Power, 1948Message to Johannesburg on Behalf ofWoodside SanctuaryNotes on India Today, 1927Notes on Point Four, 1950A Message to Randolph-Macon, 1943The Novelist and the Best-sellerMessage to South Africa, 1958Novels of the East and West, 1933 (alsotitled East and West and the Novel)The Mind of the Militarist, 1938Missionaries of Empire, 1934Most Unforgettable Character I’ve Met, 1946Now That We Know, 1943Of Men and Women, 1959The Pill and the Teenage Girl, 1967A Portrait of My Father, 1936Postwar China and the United States, 1943Prejudice vs. Patriotism, 1943President Truman’s Point Four, 1950Principles of Leadership, 1960Problems of PopulationProtestant Among the Presbyterians, 1933Protesting an Unfavorable Review of LillianSmith’s ‘Killers of The Dream,’ 1949Psychological Setting, 1935Pursuit of Happiness, 1963A Quarter Century: Its Human Tragedies, 1961Question the United Nations, 1947Questions and Answers, 1943Questions Indians Ask Me, 1946Mr. Clinton Stops Starvation, 1949An Old Trick of the West, 1939Must We Have Orphanages?, 1955 (previouslypublished as The Children Waiting)On Discovering America, 1937On the Cultivation of a Young Genius, 1937The Race Barrier—That Must Be Destroyed!,1942 (subtitled East and West—Can TheyMeet?)Must We Have Orphans, 1955On the Writing of Novels, 1933Race Relations and Race Pride, 1933My Chinese NurseAn Open Letter to Japan, 1958Reading Aloud in the FamilyMy House in Center City, 1965An Open Letter to Okinawa, 1950Reading and the American Public, 1966My Maiden EffortAn Open Letter to the Chinese People, 1938The Real Triangle of Life, 1941My Most Inspiring Moment, 1961Our Dangerous Myths about China, 1949(later published as Some American MythsAbout the Chinese)Recognition and the Writer, 1940Our Film Council, 1949Relief—for the American Conscience, 1943My Most Interesting MomentMy Neighbor’s SonMy Philosophy for Living Wisely, 1959My World: American Children —Alien byBirth, 1964 [first in My World series]Our Frontier in China, 1941Our Ignorance of Asia, 1947My World of Home, 1965 (also titled At Home& At Home With Pearl Buck) [fifth in MyWorld series]Our Last Chance in China, 1944My World: I Visit Tibet’s Dalai Lama,1965 [third in My World series]Peace—A Dream or a Threat, 1940My World in Florida (not published)[fourth in My World series]My World in Texas (cancelled)[sixth in My World series]Nanking Station Report 1926-1927, 1927Nationalism and Patriotism, 1940The Need for Peace and Security, 1948Nehru, 1949New, 1941The New Age, 1957New Americans in Japan, 1952The New ChildrenOur Sexual Revolution, 1964Parable from China, 1941Peace Symposium, 1939Pearl Buck: Dawn in the East, 1971Pearl Buck Denounces American Brand ofDemocracy, 1941Pearl Buck on Race Prejudice, 1942Pearl Buck Speaks for Democracy, 1942Pearl Buck Talks of Her Life in China, 1931Pearl Buck Tells of the Gift that Lasts aLifetime,1958Pearl Buck’s Likes—And Her Dislikes, 1954Pearl Buck’s Message to New York Chapter,1935The New China: It’s Only Slightly Different,1972 (excerpted from China Past & Present)Pearl Buck Writes on Birth Control, 1939A New Education for a New Day, 1944Pearl S. Buck Says: We Can Free the Children,1956New Evidence of the Militarization of America,1949New Modes of Chinese Marriage, 1927The New Nationalism, 1931The New Patriotism, 1941New Tools for Schools, 1943The New Traveler in China, 1946A New World for Our ChildrenPearl HarborPearl S. Buck: The Two Chinas, 1971People, East and West, 1943People in Pain, 1941The People of Japan, 1954People Will Be Free, 1948Peoples and the Peace, 1943Relations Between Citizen and State andRetardedResolution—Gandhi Memorial, 1948The Responsibility of Being an AmericanRevolution, 1928The River, 1931Road to the FutureRomantic AmericaRoom in the Inn, 1950Rose Kennedy, 1970Roses, 1939The Rulers of China, 1935Save The Children For What?, 1943Saving the Good Earth, 1947The Secret of American Unity, 1946The Secret of China’s Victory, 1970 (written1941)Security in a Cage, 1938A Sense of Humor, 1933The Sexual Revolution, 1964Should Gandhi’s Assassin Be Killed?, 1948Should White Parents Adopt Brown Babies?,1958The Single Candle, 1940Soil Erosion—Anywhere, 1942The Soldiers of Japan, 1939Solitary, 1946The Solitary Priest, 1926Some American Myths about the Chinese,1949 (previously published as OurDangerous Myths About China)Pearl S. Buck International 520 Dublin Road, Perkasie, PA 18944 215-249-0100 pearlsbuck.org

Some Problems Missionaries Face TodaySeveral Worlds)When I Go for a Visit (To Be a Welcome Guest),1962The Soul of China, 1930Toward a Better World, 1955The Soul of the East, 1932Tribute to Dr. Machen, 1937Speaking as a Mother, 1939Tribute to Emily Greene Balch, 1955Speaking as an American, 1940Tribute to Gandhi, 1947Where are the Young Rebels?, 1935The Spearhead (sold but unpublished), 1965A Tribute to YOU, the Most Important Woman,1957Where I LiveWhere Shall They Go for Glory?, 1941Two Americans (Thomas Jefferson & AbrahamLincoln), 1943Where the Chinese People Stand, 1943Two Views of the East, 1943The White Mother, 1958The Spirit Behind the Weapon, 1942The Spirit of Religion TodaySpiritual Revulsion, 1942Starvation Can Be Stopped NowThe Stately Homes of Bucks County, 1961Statement of Pearl S. Buck, for “The Book ofHope,” 1940Understanding the Chinese, 1944Undeveloped Areas, 1949The Unexpected and How It HappensWhen I Was a ChildWhere America Stands, 1947Where the Twain Meet, 1944Why Asia Hates Us, 1951Why.Should I Care?, 1932Will A Miracle Child Be Born This Year?, 1970Statement of Purposes for the GandhiMemorialUnforgettable Character (Henry/Harry Holt),unpublishedStatement of the Founding of the Pearl S.Buck Foundation, 1964The Unity of China, 1970 (written 1941)Urquhart, 1949Statement of the Liberal Position on IndiaA Visit, 1962Statement on the Death of William Faulkner,1962Visit to Japan, 1966The Story of Dragon Seed (written formovie premiere), 1944Voices from South America, 1947Woman in Search of Herself, 1948(submitted, unsold)Wanted: Letters to China, 1943Woman in the Waves, 1953 (unsold)Wanted: a New Morality, 1966Woman of the World, 1947Wanted: Real Women, 1962 (also published asChanging Relationships Between Men andWomen)Woman’s Role in the World, 1941Take Time to Read Good Books, 1937Talks About China, 1939Talks with Masha [Scott], 1945Teachers for Fascism’s Heirs, 1944Tell the People, 1945Test of a Good NovelThanks to Japan, 1938That Children May LiveVoices from India, 1947War! What the Women of America Can Do toPrevent It, 1939A Warning about China, 1943Warning to Free Nations, 1941There Are No Backward People, 1943Washington Memorial, 1948They Can’t Enjoy Books if They Can’t Read,1949We Can Free the Children, 1956We Can Give Thanks For, 1962They Who Are Not Yet Born, 1940We Must Be One Family, 1946This I Believe, 1951We Must Quit Playing Santa Claus, 1943This is No Family Quarrel—This Concerns Allthe World, 1942We Must Stand Together, 1941This is the Lost Child (for Pearl S. BuckFoundation), c. 1960sWe Need, Most of All, the World View, 1946This New Liberty, 1941 (also titledPeace—A Dream or a Task)A Thought for Christmas, 1955A Thought for Christmas DayThoughts of a Woman at ChristmasThrough China’s Gateway, 1955Tinder for Tomorrow, 1942To a Young American, 1965To Begin Peace NowTo End Genocide, 1948To India with Love, 1965 [second in MyWorld series]To Make a Film, 1963To My Daughters with Love, 1967 (excerptsfrom the book of the same name?)To Speak for Peace, 1947To Win Asia AgainTo Win the Peace, 1943Total Victory, 1942Touch of Life, 1954 (excerpted from MyWe Need the World View, 1948Welcome House, Inc., 1958Welcome House, Inc. (different)Welcome House, 1958Western Weapons in the Hands of the RecklessEast, 1937What America Means to Me, 1943What Americans Can Do, 1947What Are We Fighting For in the Orient?, 1942What Asians Want, 1951What Chinese Parents Can Teach Us, 1941What I Learned From Chinese Women, 1972What Is Humanity’s Greatest Need Today?,1939What Is Loyalty?, 1953What it Takes to Be Happy, 1945What Women Can Do For Peace, 1939What Religion Means To Me, 1933Windows to the World, 1949The Winning of the Peace, 1943Winter in Vermont, 1965Wise Chinese, 1935 (also published asThe Chinese Attitude Toward Graft)Woman (submitted, unused)Women: a Minority Group, 1940Women and Their Place, 1947Women and Victory, 1942Women and War, 1940Women as Angels, 1966Women at Work, 1935Women: Half the World’s PopulationWomen in China, 1932Women in the Post-War World, 1943Women’s Place in a Democracy, 1941Women’s Voluntary ServiceWords of Love, 1974Words to Live By, 1952The World and the Victor, 1938World ChildrenWorld CooperationWorld Needs, 1947The World of Tomorrow, 1941A World Poet, undatedWorld Understanding through Reading, 1948World Unity, 1947The World We Face, 1952Writing of a PlayThe Writing of “East Wind: West Wind,” 1932Yen of China, 1948The Young Chinese Discover China, 1970(written 1935)You and Your MiracleYour Boy and U.M.T. [Universal MilitaryTraining], 1951What the Peoples of Asia Want, 1951AutobiographyWhat We Are Fighting For in the Orient, 1942A Bridge for Passing, 1962When a Daughter Marries, 1949Essay on Myself, 1966Pearl S. Buck International 520 Dublin Road, Perkasie, PA 18944 215-249-0100 pearlsbuck.org

I Am an American (unpublished manuscript)My Mother’s House, 1965My Several Worlds, 1954On Discovering America, 1936Our Heritage: The Birthplace of Pearl S. Buck,1965 (pamphlet)BiographyBroadcastsAmerican Unity in Asia (broadcast), 1943American Triptych (The Townsman, The LongLove, Voices in the House), 1958(*John Sedges)The Artist and the Mesa (radio script)East and West, 1975British Broadcast, 1942Escape at Midnight and Other Stories, 1963Broadcast for Lincoln University, 1942Far and Near: Stories of China, Japan, andAmerica, 1947Address at Interracial Rally (broadcast), 1942The Exile, 1936Broadcast for the International Federation

Colored-White Relations is Central War Theme, 1942 Come In, Mary, 1965 Coming of Jesus, 1971 Comment for American Magazine, 1942 Comment on Gyandev, 1943 Comment on ‘Prelude to War,’ 1943 Comment on Race Prejudice in Asia, 1947 Commentary on Lynching Communism in China, 1928 Conclusion: East and West, 1945 Conflict and Cooperation

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