The Grapes of Wrath
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What makes John Steinbeck a good writer?





His descriptions are superb, he can convey meaning to everything, even the simplest things in life. V.

You seem like you know a lot about John Steinbeck. What was John Steinbeck's political views? People told me socialist. I'm just curious, I've been looking on the internet. I got socialist, communist. I would totally love it if some one gave me a straight forward answer. Thank you in advance.


He can't be easily pigeon-holed. He certainly wasn't communist. Today he'd be considered a social liberal and a fiscal conservative. He studied communism and socialism because he was interested in solutions to social ills. He wanted things to be better.
He was for the little guy and was keenly aware of the way fortunes are made by exploiting them. He saw this first-hand in California's agricultural fiefdoms and never forgot it. But he understood the job-creating engine that capitalism was and is.

Thank you for clearing that up. I was getting a tad confused. I was like what? You helped a lot, thank you.


The way he can make you feel what his characters are feeling. A good author knows not to say "so-and-so was sad," but a great author knows how to make the reader feel the sadness that the character was feeling.


That's funny! I just recently finished To Kill A Mockingbird.
Thanks for that tad-bit of interesting information.


Now that you've done To Kill A Mockingbird, you might want to try Truman Capote's In Cold Blood. He and Harper Lee were childhood friends, and he was the model for Dill. She was his research assistant for In Cold Blood. It's very different than To Kill A Mockingbird, though.





Nor do the other pundits necessarily take their cue from the NYT literary section, especially in the 60`s when they had mediocre critics. Sorry to disallusion you, but the NYT may have been the best in worldwide news reporting but when it came to its culture section, it sucked royally.
As for editorializing, is that a quote from their editor in chief or their critic? Give us a date and writer.

Here's two sources:
UC Riverside's Carney... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHiy3w...
John Gardner... http://redroom.com/member/monty-heyin...
There was a time when the East Coast defined and felt ownership of the right to define what was noteworthy in American literature. Steinbeck caught them by surprise. I'm sure they're eating their words over that article.

Steinbeck is one of my favorite writers, and I've read his books many times. Frankly, I couldn't care less what highbrow literary critics think of him. Their opinions do not detract from my enjoyment of his books one iota.




He tells stories and describes people like no one else.
Doc and Mac will live for ever.


I've read:
THE LONG VALLEY (1938)
THE GRAPES OF WRATH (1939)
CANNERY ROW (1945)
THE PEARL (1947)
EAST OF EDEN (1952)
Very soon I'm going to read his TRAVELS WITH CHARLEY (1962).

Some books are not just to be read...






And he was sexy.

How could a Socialist run for President in that same system?



i am reading ms babb's book at the moment and it is beautifully written; very moving.

He ran as a Socialist. We actually have more than two parties vying for the presidential slot in some states.
Since 1976 the Socialist party has fielded a presidential contender in every election bar none. In that year the nominee was Frank Zeidler, former Socialist mayor of Milwaukee from 1948-60.
The following are some of the US cities that have had Socialist mayors; Milwaukee (several) Butte Montana, Minneapolis, Schenectady, New York, Burlington Vermont (2), Flint, Michigan, Bridgeport and Norwalk Conn.
The current independent Senator from Vermont, Bernie Sanders, was the Socialist mayor of Burlington VT in the early 80's, having won his position by besting a corrupt Democratic hold on that city, ie. non competitive city contracts were being awarded to party friends and cronies.
The US Socialist Party bills itself as the only democratic Marxist party in the US

The facility to communicate his compassion towards his characters and instill in us those feelings is what he separates him from so many other writers. There's a very strong sense of humanity that is so very pervasive in his writing.
Contrast that with Tom Wolfe's elitist attitude towards his characters in BONFIRE OF THE VANITIES and you will not see any greater difference.
In his travel book TRAVELS WITH CHARLY, he writes of the migrant farm workers he meets early on, at about the same time he meets the hermetic, unfriendly wandering actor. He writes of his strong affinity with this group.
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