Nov 19, 2024 8:14 PM
The combination of the puny length and great acclaim of this book made it seem like an obvious choice for the first dive into the work of Steinbeck. In retrospect, It far exceeded my expectations.
What this man can do within such a small page count is truly astonishing. The fact that I'm a sucker for the rural/working class themes and bleak and pessimistic settings, takes nothing away from just how well the author executes this.
It's a great story about friendship, loyalty and sacrifice, but also about the struggle of the working men in the USA during the great depression. The obvious main antagonist of this story is the material conditions the characters find themselves under. Besides Curley, who's a victim of his own hubris, everyone is an almost total victim of their circumstances. The story is such blatant critique of capitalist society that I'm pretty sure it must have gotten the author on at least a few lists at the time.
It made me feel uneasy how utterly helpless most everyone in the story is. Destitute farm workers slaving away their whole life, alienated from the products of their labour, deprived of any form of community and of the prospect of ever having a family, loitering around between odd jobs, and spending every penny they make on booze and whores, the only luxury they can ever afford; a crippled black stable worker spending his life laying low and trying not to get lynched; a lonely wife of an ill-tempered failson; a mentally challenged man who is entirely dependent on his only friend and caretaker; and finally a man who sacrificed all of his life prospects to take care of him. In the end, he effectively trades his sanity to spare his friend the pain he didn't deserve.
Everyone is a loser, with the biggest one being the best man among them.
6 Comments
1 year ago
I still have never read a Steinbeck. Arguably (looking at you Toni Morrison) my glaringest literary gap. Nice writeup.
1 year ago
Ya, I remember reading this in high school. I was so unprepared for the ending. Literally threw the book across the room. I should reread it soon. Have you read any other Steinbeck? I recently read "Grapes of Wrath" for the first time and was blown away; I think you'd really like it!
1 year ago
This was the first book by Steinbeck for me. I look forward to reading more
1 year ago
I can't help but remember how much time was spent by my 9th grade English teacher on Steinbeck's supposed underlying misogyny for not giving a name to 'Curley's wife'. Irks me to this day.
1 year ago
I haven't read this since high school but it must be his darkest work. Even in settings as bleak as this, Steinbeck is most often still optimistic and believes in the good of people. Thou mayest or thou mayest not.,..
1 year ago
That's a really good point. As sad and dark as it is, it still ended with a selfless act of mercy by George and compassion by Slim.