"How does a woman of this magnitude and range slip away from our national consciousness? She has not exactly disappeared. Rather, as one reader of an earlier draft of this book shrewdly put it, she has been "hidden in plain sight," obscured beneath a caricature that belies her complexity and her achievement. … In the years after World War II, Buck's literary reputation shrunk to the vanishing point. She stood on the wrong side of virtually every line drawn by those who constructed the lists of required reading in the 1950s and 1960s."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Anti-communists from the United StatesHistorical novelistsWomen academics from the United StatesHuman rights activistsWomen activists from the United States
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Peter Conn in "Rediscovering Pearl Buck" from Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography (1996)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Pearl_S._Buck
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Pearl S. Buck
Pearl Sydenstricker Buck (born Pearl Comfort Sydenstricker; Chinese: 赛珍珠; Pinyin: Sài Zhēnzhū; 26 June 1892 – 6 March 1973), primarily known as Pearl S. Buck, was a prolific American writer. In 1938, she became the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.
73 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Pearl S. Buck →
Related Quotes
"The truth is always exciting. Speak it, then. Life is dull without it."
"I grew up believing that the novel has nothing to do with pure literature. So I was taught by scholars. The art of li…"
"Nothing and no one can destroy the Chinese people. They are relentless survivors. They are the oldest civilized peopl…"
"There was an old abbot in one temple and he said something of which I think often and it was this, that when men dest…"
"The young do not know enough to be prudent, and so they attempt the impossible, and achieve it, generation after gene…"
"Shri Guru Granth Sahib is a source book, an expression of man's loneliness, his aspiration, his longings, his cry to …"
"To eat bread without hope is still slowly to starve to death."
"The secret of joy in work is contained in one word — excellence. To know how to do something well is to enjoy it."
"Ah well, perhaps one has to be very old before one learns how to be amused rather than shocked."
"The Chinese novel was written primarily to amuse the common people. And when I say amuse I do not mean only to make t…"