Steinbeck is a regionalistic writer, which means that he focuses on a particular region (often Salinas, California) and uses it to shape his narrative. In pieces like To a God Unknown and The Long Valley, the geographical location is less of a setting and more of a character in his work. In a sense, it is anthropomorphized (personified) as having its own personality and temperament.
In Of Mice and Men, however, the first and last chapters take place in the exact same place (among the brush near a pool). He does this to show the cycle of George and Lennie's life: they end up exactly where they started. Similarly, this also happens in The Wayward Bus.
John Steinbeck conducted extensive research for his fiction by immersing himself in the environments and communities he wanted to write about. He traveled to various locations, interviewed locals, and observed their daily lives to develop authentic settings and characters for his novels. Steinbeck also relied on his own experiences and observations to accurately portray the social and economic conditions of the time.
Steinbeck was an avid reader and pulled many of his ideas and stylistic idiosyncrasies from earlier works, but noting this has his "resources" would be doing him a disservice. Steinbeck talked to people, and he listened intently to what they had to say. In researching the Grapes of Wrath, Steinbeck was out in the fields talking to the displaced workers. Prior to writing Travels With Charley, Steinbeck spent several months on the road trekking across America and talking with its denizens. In preparing notes for the Sea of Cortez, Steinbeck waded in tide pools with Ed Ricketts. It is fair to say Steinbeck's resources were first-hand accounts.
Stienbeck's stories and characters were mostly tied back to his own life experiences. For example, his home of Monterrey Bay later was the setting for most of his fiction, "We were poor people with a hell of a lot of land which made us think we were rich people."
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1940.
John Steinbeck's birth name is Steinbeck, John Ernst.
John Steinbeck has 2 children
John Steinbeck had two sons, Thomas Steinbeck and John Steinbeck IV. They were both writers and actively involved in preserving their father's legacy by overseeing his literary estate.
Ed Ricketts was the friend of John Steinbeck. He did studies on intertidal relationships in the field of marine biology. Steinbeck also did some marine biology research.
John Steinbeck's most successful novel is often considered to be "The Grapes of Wrath," which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1940 and is regarded as a classic of American literature.
There is no evidence to suggest that John Steinbeck killed his son. John Steinbeck had two sons, Thom and John Jr., and both outlived him. Steinbeck died of heart disease in 1968.
His name was John Steinbeck
John Steinbeck's father was named John Ernst Steinbeck. He was a businessman and served as the treasurer for Monterey County in California.
"Of Mice and Men" is a work of fiction, specifically a novella written by John Steinbeck. It tells the story of two displaced migrant ranch workers during the Great Depression.
John Steinbeck's parents, John Ernst Steinbeck and Olive Hamilton, were from California.
John Ernst SteinbeckJohn Ernst Steinbeck