Fighting Angel

Fighting Angel

by Pearl S. Buck
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 10/10/2019

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Fighting Angel: Portrait of a Soul is Pearl S. Buck’s profoundly touching memoir of her zealous Southern Presbyterian missionary father, Absalom Sydenstricker. Andrew (as he is called in the book) set off for China in 1880 and spent most of the next half century there until his death in 1931. From isolated settlements in the poor, hostile interior, he made long preaching trips through lands convulsed by famine, banditry, and revolution.


Sydenstricker was a tragic Captain Ahab figure whose life’s work brought only a trickle of converts. His battles against church authorities – he was ahead of his time in wanting local Christians to be given greater power and in pushing for vernacular Chinese texts – meant ostracism by his colleagues and superiors. Above all, his fanatical devotion brought death and suffering to his family.


Fighting Angel, which was published in late 1936, is a companion biography to Buck’s loving portrait of her mother, The Exile: Portrait of an American Mother, published earlier that year. Both books won great popular and critical success. When, in 1938, Pearl S. Buck became the first American woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, it was not only “for her rich and truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China” but also “for her biographical masterpieces.” Fighting Angel is a more balanced biography and the superior of the pair. In fact, in her acclaimed Burying the Bones, Pearl biographer Hilary Spurling ranks Fighting Angel after The Good Earth as “probably the best book Pearl ever wrote,” praising the memoir for its “combination of cool, sharp, scrutinizing intelligence and passionate emotion.”

ISBN:
9781788690898
9781788690898
Category:
Biography: religious & spiritual
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
10-10-2019
Language:
English
Publisher:
Camphor Press Ltd
Pearl S. Buck

Pearl S. Buck was born on June 26, 1892, in Hillsboro, West Virginia. Pearl began to publish stories and essays in the 1920s, in magazines such as The Nation, The Chinese Recorder, Asia, and The Atlantic Monthly. Her first novel, East Wind, West Wind, was published by the John Day Company in 1930. In 1931, John Day published Pearl’s second novel, The Good Earth.

This became the bestselling book of both 1931 and 1932, won the Pulitzer Prize and the Howells Medal in 1935, and would be adapted as a major MGM film in 1937. In 1938, less than a decade after her first book had appeared, Pearl won the Nobel Prize in literature, the first American woman to do so.

By the time of her death in 1973, Pearl had published more than seventy books: novels, collections of stories, biography and autobiography, poetry, drama, children’s literature, and translations from the Chinese. She is buried at Green Hills Farm in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

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