Descended from a line of Quakers and sea captains, Nora Waln was born to parents Thomas Lincoln and Lillian Waln. During childhood, she developed a fond interest of Chinese culture after learning of a family friendship with the Lin family resulting from trading in the early 1800’s. In 1919, she began attending Swarthmore College, a liberal arts college founded by Quakers, near Philadelphia. While studying at Swarthmore, Waln was contacted by two members of the Lin family, who were traveling in the United States. They invited her to visit at their Hopei Province homestead in China. During her junior year at Swarthmore, World War I broke out and Waln left school, before graduating.
In 1920, Waln set sail for China. Upon arrival she was taken in by the Lin family as a “daughter of affection.” Waln ended up living in the Lin house for 12 years and subsequently developed the idea for her memoir House of Exile. The family was considered “exiles” of the Canton Lin homestead because a Lin had been ordered by Kublai Khan, the Mongol Emperor from 1260 to 1294, to help work with the Grand Canal in Hopei.
While living in China, Waln met George Edward Osland-Hill, an English Foreign Service Officer whom she called “Ted.” They were married in Shanghai at the Cathedral for the Church of England in 1922. In 1933, Waln’s House of Exile was published with much esteemed praise. The 12 year memoir of her time spent in China as the adopted “daughter of affection” gave readers an inside look at Chinese culture and customs, such as the “Farmers Calendar,” in addition to the nation’s political and public hardships. Waln had been the first foreigner inside of the Lin home since its founding 650 years prior. The 1933 bestseller not only unobtrusively captured the view of daily life in the Lin household, but also reflected Waln’s insider view of the overthrow of the Manchu dynasty.
Waln’s husband retired from the service and became interested in studying music, so in June 1934, the family relocated to Germany. They arrived only two days before the “Blood Purge of 1934. From the very start of Waln’s time in Germany, she experienced much of Hitler’s Nazi movement. She felt compelled to recount her experiences and began working on her next book. Waln and her husband stayed in Germany until 1938, after which they traveled back to Osland-Hill’s native England. In 1939, Waln published Reaching for the Stars, an account of her time spent in Germany. In the book Waln shared her very optimistic view that the people of Germany would not allow Hitler’s National Socialism to last. She based her beliefs on Chinese political theory, following the notion that such an educated people would revolt after the realization of the dangerous communism in the works. By the end of World War II, however, Waln was less certain as so many of those who were strongly against the Nazis had been killed. Reaching for the Stars was a bestseller in the United States and was reissued in 1994 under the title The Approaching Storm: One Woman’s Story of Germany 1934-1938.
In 1940, Waln was granted an honorary degree of Master of Arts form Swarthmore College. Waln traveled a great deal throughout the 1940’s, seeing Asia, Europe, and the Americas. After the war, she lectured across the United States, all of the proceeds went to war relief funding. In 1946, Waln became the European Administrator for the Kappa Kappa Gamma fund for Refugee Children.
Waln contributed articles as Tokyo correspondent for the Saturday Evening Post from 1947 to 1951. She also contributed to Atlantic Monthly as a correspondent from Germany and Scandinavia, after which she freelanced. Waln was one of the few journalists to report from China and Mongolia. In 1958, Waln’s husband passed away. She spent her last three years residing near Malaga in Southern Spain.