Monday, May 7, 2007

Lost Steinbeck Writings Found



Lost Steinbeck writings found
From LA Daily News:
BY DANA BARTHOLOMEW, Staff Writer
NORTH HILLS - Writer Joel Eisenberg was poring over some crumbling manuscripts at 3 a.m. when the bombshell hit.
He realized the handwritten scrawl swimming before his eyes was none other than the missing draft of "Sweet Thursday" by Nobel Prize-winning author John Steinbeck.
What followed was literary shock - and a string of writerly expletives.
"This stuff was unbelievable - just laying in a box," said Eisenberg, 43, of North Hills. "I had this `Aha!' moment when I realized not only what I had here, but what I had the responsibility to do."
The cardboard box, found in the effects of the late "Guys and Dolls" producer Ernest H. Martin, contained the 188-page draft of "Sweet Thursday," the lighthearted sequel to "Cannery Row."
On crumbling sepia-toned pages, it also contained the unfinished draft of "The Bear Flag Cafe," an unperformed musical comedy collaboration with Martin and partner Cy Feuer from which the novel emerged. Read the rest of the article here.

The Library has all of Steinbeck's novels. My favorite is "Travels With Charley." In December 1959 Steinbeck's work on The Acts of King Arthur was interrupted when he suffered a small stroke. The effects were not permanent. Steinbeck, now in his late 50's, put aside the Arthur manuscript and started a new novel, The Winter of Our Discontent, set in the 1960's and published in 1961.
Adlai Stevenson, among others, had encouraged Steinbeck to travel through the U.S. as he had in the 1930's gathering impressions and canvassing attitudes that Steinbeck could cast in the form of a book. The idea appealed to Steinbeck, and as he completed The Winter of Our Discontent, he began making plans for a drive through America. He commissioned the construction of a special vehicle a sturdy truck on the back of which was mounted a cabin in which Steinbeck could sleep, cook, and work. He was delighted when the truck arrived, and spent much of the summer provisioning it for the expedition ahead.
His wife Elaine, concerned about her husband's health, was at first opposed to the trek. She could not change her husband's mind, however, and he christened his vehicle “Rocinante” in honor of Don Quixote's horse. Elaine provided the title Travels With Charley because both Steinbeck and Elaine admired Robert Louis Stevenson's Travels With a Donkey (1879).
Steinbeck decided to take their pet poodle, Charley, on the 10,000 mile journey. Travels With Charley can best be appreciated as an act of courage.
The journey began on September 23, 1960. Steinbeck joined Elaine and her relatives in Amarillo, Texas, in time for Thanksgiving 1960. They returned to New York in January 1961.
It was published mid-summer 1961 and became one of the largest commercial successes of Steinbeck's career. Steinbeck was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature on October 25, 1962.


Sue


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