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Originally posted on my blog
"You're bound to get idears if you go thinkin' about stuff"
We follow the Joad family who were forced to leave their home in Oklahoma during the Great Depression. One of their sons, though, has just been released from prison and is on parole. For that reason, he is not allowed to leave the state. Nonetheless, the whole family head to California, where they hope to find a better future.
The setup of this novel is interesting. We read chapters from the Joad family's p ...more
"You're bound to get idears if you go thinkin' about stuff"
We follow the Joad family who were forced to leave their home in Oklahoma during the Great Depression. One of their sons, though, has just been released from prison and is on parole. For that reason, he is not allowed to leave the state. Nonetheless, the whole family head to California, where they hope to find a better future.
The setup of this novel is interesting. We read chapters from the Joad family's p ...more

To be fair there is a lot great about this novel. Steinbeck paints a picture with words that I can't really compare to any other writer I've read. That being said, setting and atmosphere aside, this book is incredibly hollow and, at times, surprisingly shallow. Several characters feel unnecessary (Noah, the grandparents) and the pro-socialism vibe along with the almost saccharine moralizing about family life and the 'community'. Overall, nothing as great as I've heard but still, at times, a good
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Oct 14, 2017
Bonnie Brandt
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
classic-fiction

Mar 19, 2014
Victoria Evangelina Allen
marked it as to-read


Jan 02, 2016
Lynn
marked it as to-read

Apr 08, 2016
Jannie
marked it as to-read