
Buck spent her childhood in China with her missionary parents, and later returned to the country with her husband, who was an agricultural economist missionary. The Good Earth was banned by Mao Zedong for presenting an “unromantic” agrarian viewpoint, which is interesting considering his failed land policies led to one of the worst famines of all time. The novel focuses on a rural Chinese family at the turn of the 20th Century as Wang Lung, the protagonist, struggles with fortunes and misfortunes, including degenerate landowners, slavery, opium, poverty, famine and displacement.

Buck’s generational House of Earth trilogy–followed by Sons and A House Divided.

The Good Earth is the first installment of Nobel Prize-winning author Pearl S. For more details and to see the full list of discounted titles, click here. Simply enter a valid email address and a digital voucher will me emailed directly to you. Select e-book prices are available 60% off until September 30. Read Banned Books is a promotion from openroadmedia that brings censored literature directly into the hands of readers. “Where is the hoe and where is the plow? And where is the seed for the wheat planting? Come, Ching, my friend–come–call the men–I go out to the land!” And he heard it above every other voice in his life and he tore off the long robe he wore and he tripped off his velvet shoes and his white stockings and he rolled his trousers to is knees and he stood forth robust and eager and he shouted,

Then a voice cried out in him, a voice deeper than love cried out in him for his land. And he saw that the waters had receded and the sun lay shining under the dry cold wind and under the ardent sun He went to the door of his house and he looked over his fields. There came a day when summer was ended and the sky in early morning was clear and cold and blue as seas water and a clean autumn wind blew hard over the land, and Wang Lung woke as from a sleep.
