Review
Boston Transcript One need never have lived in China or know anything about the Chinese to understand it or respond to its appeal.
The Good Earth ANNOTATION
This great modern classic depicts life in China at a time before the vast political and social upheavals transformed an essentially agrarian country into a world power. Nobel Prize-winner Pearl S. Buck traces the whole cycle of lifeits terrors, its passions, its ambitions, and its rewards.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Wang Lung, rising from humble Chinese farmer to wealthy landowner, gloried in the soil he worked. He held it above his family, even above his gods. But soon, between Wang Lung and the kindly soil that sustained him, came flood and drought, pestilence and revolution....
Through this one Chinese peasant and his children, Nobel Prize-winner Pearl S. Buck traces the whole cycle of life, its terrors, its passion, its persistent ambitions and its rewards. Her brilliant novelbeloved by millions of readers throughout the worldis a universal tale of the destiny of men.
FROM THE CRITICS
Bookman
To read this story of Wang Lung is to be slowly and deeply purified; and when the last page is finished it is as if some significant part of one's own days were over.
Saturday Review
A beautiful, beautiful book. At last we read, in the pages of a novel, of the real people of China.
New York Times Book Review
The Good Earth has style, power, coherence and a pervasive sense of dramatic reality.