Goodreads Ireland discussion
Previous Monthly Reads
>
Spoiler: The Grapes of Wrath
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Susan
(new)
Jun 23, 2017 09:37PM

reply
|
flag

Donna, did you read it in high school like I did?

I nominated and posted a couple of comments on the original thread but only had one comment, so assumed no-one was reading it. As a result I'm afraid I've only just looked at the spoiler thread. Sorry.


It dies however leave a seconder and s number if voters who just havent bothered to read the book.
I dont understand those who will take part in these polls then dissapear when there books win.
Apologies again Charlieas my inititial comment was 100% unfair on you .
It came from frustration that a lot of people are voting in polls with no intention of taking part.


Ten voted for it anyway.
Sadly not one of the Steinbeck books I read , not an author I enjoyed hugely, quality writing but not a style I enjoy.

I find his classics are not always my favorites. This was an important book as it depicted such a horrific time in our history. It's not often than authors write about ordinary people but Steinbeck does it exceedingly well.
I love Steinbeck but maybe because he lived in my neck of the woods and I am quite familiar with the places he writes about. It always takes me by surprise how Monterrey is depicted in his books and how it is now, a playground for the rich. Still Monterrey does a good job in keeping in touch with its roots. I go there about every 18 months as I love their aquarium.
The times are poignant to me because they remind me so much of my grandfather's stories as he wandered Calif. as an oil worker, a rancher and even painting the Golden Gate Bridge which is a full-time job. It takes 3 years to paint it and when you get done, you start right back over.


Charlie, it has been my experience that those with the least are usually those with the least. These are the people Steinbeck usually writes about. In Cannery Row they are sleeping in the outdoors and when one gets a house they all move in together. Everybody contributes everything they have The rich, on the other hand, contribute pennies.
My grandfather had a rough time in the Depression. My uncles would take off school to go deer hunting for food. Yet, his two younger brothers moved in to finish high school. They had nothing and took in two more. Of course, then the brothers were the ones who took off school to hunt.

https://www.newyorker.com/humor/daily...





Would either of you recommend it as the best Steinbeck - how would you rate it?"
Cphe, I think East of Eden is my favorite. It's hard to beat a good Cain and Abel story (again the Biblical reference), I read it when Oprah picked it for her book club and was instantly drawn in.



I loved of mice and men but the grapes of Wrath I just couldn't read as fast.
I don't know if I liked the ending. it was just weird.


What I couldn’t remember picking up on before was how the California farmers were being squeezed by the banks / corporations, and in some cases letting the fruit rot rather than picking it because they couldn’t afford to sell the fruit for as low a price as what the canneries were offering - canneries owned by the same banks / corporations. I’m assuming - and I’ll need to rely on Susan for info on this - that the farms in California are mainly larger affairs these days as a result of this time? The whole idea of letting the fruit rot while the people starved was almost reminiscent to me of the situation in Ireland during the famine.
Steinbeck’s sympathies toward the migrants and the organised labour movement were very much in evidence, as we know - I loved the govt camp vibe, rosy as the whole setup seemed to be. The whole ‘reds’ notion, driven as it was by the fear of the landowners having their land taken from them, in the same way that their ancestors had themselves taken the land as Steinbeck ironically points out, was something I found really interesting, predating the whole McCarthyism era as the book did.
Like someone mentioned above, I loved Ma as a character - in my view the bedrock of the family, working as she did to keep everything together. The whole notion of Al ‘tomcatting’ about the place entertained me, showing a very different reality to that possibly portrayed when looking back at the morals of the era - Casy’s own philandering after leading meetings seemed to back this up.
I’m not sure what I think of the way that the book ended, although the image was obviously amazingly powerful. I can’t help surmising what happened to the family - was there any sort of happy ending? I should really do a bit of research as to the fate of the migrants in real life. The fact that there was no relief or assistance for them beggars belief, but I suppose that’s me speaking from a country with a well established welfare system, which was itself only set up after the book was written.
I listened to this book on my way to work each morning, and it was amazing how many mornings I went in with the themes provoking thoughts for a good while after finishing my commute. It’s a book that I feel is still massively relevant today - I heard recently that some sort of dispute as to film rights may well have been resolved, so we might eventually see a modern interpretation of the story bringing the story to those who might not know it.
As my old history professor used to say, a real ‘tour de force’!

My grandparents came from Sweden. My grandfather became an egg rancher, a term I am still unclear about to this day. My father rarely talked about his childhood other than to say he worked hard his whole life so I wouldn't have a childhood like his. He was the oldest of five. My grandmother and her sister worked in a peach cannery that was miserable work. They stood in water up to their knees. They gave my father a job in the cannery office on school breaks but my mother had the job of standing in water. She was so angry and only did it one summer. I guess the idea of women in the office wasn't quite acceptable yet.
You would be surprised how well many of the migrant families did, Allan. The parents worked hard all their lives and their children had that work ethic. Calif. did not have a good welfare system but it does have an amazing education system. Community colleges (2 year schools) are free to residents. Colleges and universities are reasonable to residents and there are lots of economic programs. Of course, there is a big row now as the schools are accepting more international and out of state students because they pay much higher tuition. It makes it harder for residents who have paid the taxes all their lives to get it in. Janet Napolitano, former Homeland Security Chief and Current UC University president, had come into a lot of flak for making policies like that. Sorry I digress.


It's hard to argue with the fact that our ancestors had both more varied and more difficult lives than we have today - despite all the adventure, I think that I prefer the 21st century life...
Books mentioned in this topic
East of Eden (other topics)To a God Unknown (other topics)
Cannery Row (other topics)