Celebrating Steinbeck, ‘bard of the people’
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Even in a county of bounty, the voice of a writer who spoke out
for the poor and oppressed still rings true. Readers can hear it in
his masterwork, “The Grapes of Wrath.” More than 60 years after its
publication, John Steinbeck’s chronicle of the Joads’ forced exodus
from Dust Bowl-era Oklahoma and their plight as migrant farm workers
in California sells more than 300,000 copies annually.
While set in the Great Depression, the Pulitzer Prize-winning
classic reverberates with themes that are as relevant today as they
were in the 1930s and ‘40s: homelessness, poverty, migration, moral
responsibility and the underside of the American Dream.
The film adaptation of this 1939 classic, directed by John Ford
and starring Henry Fonda, will be shown at the Newport Beach Central
Library at 5 p.m. Wednesday. The free screening is part of “Bard of
the People: The Life and Times of John Steinbeck,” a nationwide
celebration honoring the legacy of a writer who perhaps most
thoroughly explored the social, political and cultural issues of his
day.
Issues born of the Depression are also the backdrop of “In Dubious
Battle,” Steinbeck’s 1936 novel about striking workers in a
California apple orchard. The book launched his career as an “artiste
engage.” Together with “The Grapes of Wrath,” and “Of Mice and Men”
-- his portrayal of itinerant ranch hands who develop a complex bond
-- it forms a trilogy that solidified Steinbeck as a spokesperson for
the common man.
While best known for portrayals of those on the margins of
society, Steinbeck also illuminated the beauty and cultural diversity
of the Central California coast in novels set in mountain ranches and
rural hideaways. Young adult readers can share this vision in “The
Red Pony,” four coming-of-age stories about the connection a young
boy forms with a hot-tempered colt.
For more mature audiences, “Tortilla Flat” depicts a California
Camelot above Monterey, inhabited by a gang of penniless paisanos.
Also set in Monterey, amid its sardine canneries, vacant lots and
flophouses, is “Cannery Row,” featuring such memorable denizens as
grocer Lee Chong, marine biologist Doc and bordello proprietress Dora
Flood.
In 1960, after suffering heart problems, Steinbeck decided he
needed to travel across the U.S. in a camper, to immerse himself in
the fabric of the country he documented so sympathetically in his
fiction. He chronicled his journey with his third wife Elaine’s
standard poodle in “Travels with Charley.” Shortly after its
publication in 1962, he received the Nobel Prize, “for his realistic
and imaginative writings, combining as they do sympathetic humor and
keen social perception.”
On accepting the award, the 60 year-old author observed,
“Literature is as old as speech. It grew out of human need for it and
it has not changed except to become more needed.”
Readers can find works commemorating the birth anniversary of the
“bard of the people” in a first floor display at the Central Library,
1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach
Public Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams. All titles
may be reserved by accessing the catalog at
www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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