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Mad at the World: A Life of John Steinbeck

por William Souder

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1126243,255 (3.88)2
"A biography of one of America's most popular and misunderstood authors, John Steinbeck. This first full-length biography of the Nobel Laureate to appear in a quarter century explores John Steinbeck's long apprenticeship as a writer struggling through the depths of the Great Depression, and his rise to greatness with masterpieces such as The Red Pony, Of Mice and Men, and The Grapes of Wrath. His most poignant and evocative writing emerged in his sympathy for the Okies fleeing the dust storms of the Midwest, the migrant workers toiling in California's fields, and the laborers on Cannery Row, reflecting a social engagement--paradoxical for all of his natural misanthropy--radically different from the writers of the so-called Lost Generation. A man by turns quick-tempered, contrary, compassionate, and ultimately brilliant, Steinbeck took aim at the corrosiveness of power, the perils of income inequality, and the growing urgency of ecological collapse, all of which drive fierce public debate to this day"--… (más)
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As biographies go, this one is well-researched, clearly organized, and easily accessible. Souder avoids the pitfalls of deep speculation and meandering through philosophical analyses, but perhaps that's because Steinbeck himself, as a subject, permitted a clean approach by his mundane character. He was just a 'dude,' and a somewhat shallow one at that. If anything, my most significant criticism of "Mad at the World" is the preponderance of the banal discussed; much of Steinbeck's personal life and professional drives seem to seethe from a life of gossip-fueled cliques, intense if superficial socialization, quests for booze and sex, and avoiding adulthood while slogging through it and taking notes.

To my eye, Steinbeck comes across as a soul stuck in adolescence, rather selfishly seeking both stimulation and private space. His rage at the very real injustices in the core of American life almost ring like hot, youthful idealism given that perspective, but that image is put somewhat at abeyance by his (in my opinion, as many others') masterful ability to write what he needed to say. A proud but truly insecure, successful but defensive, clever but _kinda dense_ man, Steinbeck would've been tough to get along with but Souder succeeds in making me feel like I know him better. ( )
  MLShaw | Jun 6, 2023 |
The title provides a key to William Souder’s take on the life of John Steinbeck. Souder sees Steinbeck as a writer whose best work is powered by his anger. That anger was often directed at himself. His letters to his editor, Pascal Covici, often badmouth his work in progress—it is a bad book; he is sure it won’t sell. He wrote obsessively and was never happy to be disturbed while he was at it. One of his sons said that he came to understand that his father was a grumpy SOB, whose idea of tough love was to treat him unjustly to teach him that the world was unjust. Steinbeck was always looking for a guru. The one who influenced him most was the marine biologist Ed Ricketts, who was the model for Doc, the protagonist of Cannery Row. Ricketts inspired Steinbeck’s “phalanx theory” about the relation of the individual to the group that gets its fullest expression in The Grapes of Wrath and that may account for the frequent criticism that Steinbeck’s characters lack individuality. Souder’s biography is readable and well-documented. 4 stars. ( )
  Tom-e | Dec 10, 2022 |
This book is to me a model of literary biography. The author keeps it at a manageable length when it clearly could have been stretched a good bit. He introduces his own evaluations and opinions to some degree, but clearly leaves the heavy critical lifting to how the books were received at the time. As I teethed on the chummy, wise old crackerbarrel philosopher of Travels With Charley, it was unsettling to learn that Steinbeck was not especially likable (or, if you will, as one of his sons put it, "an asshole"). Prickly, a cruel father, and laden with rather strange eccentricities, his life was, as the author puts it, "messy". And since the author evinces considerable, perhaps total, buyin to the odd contemporary critical opinion that Travels With Charley was mostly made-up, I felt a lot like the rustic Daniel Defoe met up with in the West Country who went on about how inspiring he had found Robinson Crusoe. When told by Defoe that the story was fiction, the oldtimer replied that he wished that he had not told him so, for the book was the only thing that had given him the strength to get through the rough passages in his life. ( )
  Big_Bang_Gorilla | Sep 28, 2022 |
Steinbeck was a rough character at a rough time. Like Upton Sinclair in The Jungle, Steinbeck called attention to injustices wrought by government mismanagement and profiteering by an unscrupulous class. Writing at at time when capitalism was at a crossroads (as it is now), Steinbeck captured the essence of an era.

Souder's work measures up to Laura Dassow Walls biography of another American literary giant in Henry David Thoreau: A Life, another literary biography which I enjoyed immensely. Souder does not lionize Steinbeck in his personal life. With three marriages, and a child that admitted that his greatest insight was that "my father was an asshole," Souder does not whitewash Steinbeck's personal failings.

All in all, a very well researched and readable literary biography. At a time that echoes of the 1930's when people moved from uninhabitable places for something unknown (i.e. Chicago), I purchased the 75th anniversary edition of The Grapes of Wrath and intend to reread it. ( )
  Mark.Kosminskas | Oct 9, 2021 |
The second bio I have read on John Steinbeck, this one I found very readable and insightful on portraying the nature and motivations behind what we got in his writings. Steinbeck certainly struggled throughout his life particularly when it came to his fame and stature in the literary world. He seemed to forever anguish over his popular acclaim yet it came to him so readily almost if by accident.

His relationships with his wives and his friendships certainly drove a lot of his writing and he was able to draw pictures with words that were forever ingrained in the underbelly of society he gave us.

Culminating in his Pulitzer prize earned late in his life, Steinbeck for once saw himself deserving or at least presented this, but by his nature it was still not clear whether he believed it. Some critics of course didn't think so either. Yet in his totality his works are important and will be so always in giving us a point of view of who and what we are and where we came from. ( )
  knightlight777 | Jun 6, 2021 |
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"A biography of one of America's most popular and misunderstood authors, John Steinbeck. This first full-length biography of the Nobel Laureate to appear in a quarter century explores John Steinbeck's long apprenticeship as a writer struggling through the depths of the Great Depression, and his rise to greatness with masterpieces such as The Red Pony, Of Mice and Men, and The Grapes of Wrath. His most poignant and evocative writing emerged in his sympathy for the Okies fleeing the dust storms of the Midwest, the migrant workers toiling in California's fields, and the laborers on Cannery Row, reflecting a social engagement--paradoxical for all of his natural misanthropy--radically different from the writers of the so-called Lost Generation. A man by turns quick-tempered, contrary, compassionate, and ultimately brilliant, Steinbeck took aim at the corrosiveness of power, the perils of income inequality, and the growing urgency of ecological collapse, all of which drive fierce public debate to this day"--

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