Pearl S. Buck Birthplace, the Hillsboro, West Virginia home where American writer Pearl Buck was born
The Stulting family, Pearl Buck's maternal ancestors, moved from Utrecht, the Netherlands, in 1847 with 300 of their friends and relatives so that they might practice their religion freely during a time of religious intolerance in the Netherlands.
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Pearl S. Buck was the first American woman to win both the Pulitzer Prize (1932, for The Good Earth) and the Nobel Prize for Literature (1938).
Pearl S. Buck Birthplace, the Hillsboro, West Virginia home where American writer Pearl S. Buck was born
Pearl Harbor | Pearl Jam | Attack on Pearl Harbor | Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | Buck Rogers | Buck Owens | attack on Pearl Harbor | Pearl Bailey | Pearl | Pearl S. Buck | Pearl River Delta | pearl | Matthew Pearl | Buck-Tick | Pearl Cleage | Pearl River | John E. Buck | Girl with a Pearl Earring | Buck Clayton | Buck 65 | Pokémon Diamond and Pearl | ''Pokémon Diamond'' and ''Pearl'' | Peter Buck | Pearl hunting | Mount Pearl | Minnie Pearl | Frank Buck (animal collector) | Buck Shaw | The Great Buck Howard | Rob Buck |
She appeared in eight other films in the 1940s, including the roles of Rosa in the spy thriller, The Conspirators, Siu-Mei in Pearl S. Buck's China Sky, Toni Rosseau in Swamp Fire, Carmelita Mendoza in Jewels of Brandenburg, Narana in Arctic Manhunt, and Watona in Apache Chief.
Over the next forty years she would photograph some of the most famous artists, writers, dancers and other cultural icons of the time, including Alfred Stieglitz, Pearl S. Buck, Charles E. Burchfield, Fyodor Chaliapin, Ralph Adams Cram, W. E. B. Du Bois, Albert Einstein, Robert Frost, Granville Hicks, Malvina Hoffman, Langston Hughes, Robinson Jeffers, Isamu Noguchi, Maxfield Parrish and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Judy made her film debut in the 1961 Japan-U.S. production The Big Wave, based on the Pearl S. Buck novel.
Pulitzer-prize-winning American novelist Pearl S. Buck, raised in China and fluent in Chinese, set one of her historical novels (Peony) in a Chinese Jewish community.
Under the sponsorship of Pearl S. Buck, Liang gave solo performances in several major U.S. cities.
In the 1940s Székely-Lulofs published some new books, but in the fifties she produced mainly translations into Dutch, from English by Pearl S. Buck and Margaret Campbell Barnes, but also from Hungarian (Zsolt Harsányi, Jolán Földes) and German.
Green Hills Farm, the Bucks County, Pennsylvania location where Pearl S. Buck lived for 40 years
She has also translated a number of famous English literatures of well-known writers such as Pearl S. Buck into Oriya language.
The Old Demon is a short story set during the Second Sino-Japanese War by Pearl S. Buck.