50 books to read before you die discussion

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The Grapes of Wrath
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Lisa
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Apr 09, 2015 07:51AM

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It is a brilliant book, emotionally challenging but well wrought


The Grapes of Wrath is among his finest work, and is surely among the greatest American novels. It portrays the grimness of the dust bowl and the great depression and the awful circumstances in which people found themselves. It's not a happy book.
Steinbeck was vilified for it, branded a communist. Of course communist was the dirtiest name they could come up with. I guess he hit a nerve.

I re-read this a couple of months ago (hadn't read it since high school), and I remembered from that long-ago time that I loved it but not much else. But after this read, it's moved up to my top ten American novels-right up there with To Kill a Mockingbird. Actually, they're tied for first place.

The book took awhile for me to get into but it was a great story. Of Mice and Men is still my favorite over the two I've read by him, though. I think I'll be a big Steinbeck fan.

There is an interesting topic about the politics of this book going on right now on Goodreads under book discussion for this book -
Charlotte Allen on the 75th Anniversary of The Grapes of Wrath
The topic starts off with the controversial -
From the December 29, 2014 issue of The Weekly Standard:
As time rolled on, it became clear to everyone except English teachers that Steinbeck had gotten everything wrong in The Grapes of Wrath, perhaps deliberately.
....and a lot took offense and disagreed.

Interesting, but I find those kinds of political gotcha discussions distasteful. The discussion quickly degenerated away from The Grapes of Wrath.

Has anyone seen the film from Ken Burns about the Dust Bowl? It has amazing video footage that absolutely put a new spin on how I view it.
And, thanks, Erin, for reminding me of this!

The book took awhile for me to get into but it was a great story. Of Mice and Men is still my favorite over the two I've read by him, though. I think I'll be a big Steinbeck fan. "
I am a big Steinbeck fan.
Of Mice and Men is probably my favorite too, along with The Grapes of Wrath and East of Eden and Cannery Row, too.
According to my Goodreads tally, I've read 16 Steinbeck works - it's everything my library has. He wrote several more I would like to read.

The book took awhile for me to get into but it was a great story. Of Mice and Men is still ..."
I was a big fan, too, Buck, but I'd forgotten that I was until this year's re-read of The Grapes of Wrath. I really have to pick up his library of books for home, so I can read them all over again.

I'm a little surprised that there has been so little discussion of this novel here, I mean the story itself. And then I thought maybe it's not so surprising. I hardly know what to say about it. I'm sure it's been analyzed to death.
I generally find Steinbeck's writing the most sublime of any author I can think of. But aside from the writing itself, I imagine that The Grapes of Wrath winning of the Pulitzer prize must have had something to do with the times in which it was written.

Henry Fonda's soliloquy, before he lit out on the lam, is one of the high points in the movie for me, but in the book it didn't seem to stand out. It was part of the flow of the story.



The book took awhile for me to get into but it was a great story. Of Mice and Men is still my favorite over the two I've read by him, though. ..."
I've read a few of his books, Mice & Men was my favorite too.

I'm a little surprised that there has been so little discussion of this novel here, I mean..."
I remember it as relentless. Every time something vaguely positive happened, disaster struck. There was no hope left.

I'm a little surprised that there has been so little discussion of this novel..."
Relentless? That might be a good description, Lisa, since this really was a picture of people who had lost their world and were not finding a new one. And that makes me wonder: what was next? Did they ever find a world they could belong to?

But something will turn up! Sorry, Pollyanna just took hold of me...

Some stories just don't end well."
She was the queen of upbeat, definitely, and had to be the author of "every cloud has a silver lining", etc., and I try not to channel her too often!
But I think Steinbeck ended his story so abruptly, because he was leaving room for us to end their stories. Did they die because we didn't care enough to keep them alive? Or did we find a way for them to make a living? Or...?

Some stories just don't end well."
She was the queen of upbeat, definitely, and had to be the author of "every cloud has a silver lining", etc..."
Well we know some people survived the experience, although the death count was high, so hard to say.

Definitely weird.

I would have thought malnourishment would have been an issue, however.

I would have thought malnourishment would have been an issue, however."
I know! It does make sense that malnourishment would have increased deaths, but there were the safety nets of church and family and kind people, and I think that although food was scarce and one-note (beans and corn meal, e.g.), it was enough to sustain life. Not for everyone, of course, but for most.