Writing Magazine

The style & technique of John STEINBECK

‘Anovelist who is also a true poet’ is how The Sunday Times described John Steinbeck. In 1962 he won the Nobel Prize in Literature for his ‘realistic and imaginative writings’. He wrote 33 books: sixteen novels, six non-fiction books, two collections of short stories and several novellas. Most of his work is set in California; he made his name with Dust Bowl fiction set among common people during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

How he began

Born in Salinas, central California, in 1902, Steinbeck graduated from Salinas High School and went on to study English literature at Stanford University, leaving in 1925 without a degree. He had spent summers working on ranches and then on sugar beet farms with migrant workers. After university, he moved to New York and took odd jobs while he tried to write. Having failed to get anything published, he returned to California. In 1930 he met and married Carol Henning, his first.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writing Magazine

Writing Magazine6 min read
Ladies Who Lunch
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/24131/24131-h/24131-h.htm This month’s story, ‘Xingu’ by Edith Wharton is about ladies who lunch. It’s a light and amusing story, but with some ‘heavy’ language. I had to look up several words in the dictionary. On th
Writing Magazine2 min read
Shrinking Margins
GET PUBLISHED For many readers I’m sure that selling individual copies of books is a significant part of what they do. Some of this may be done these days via social media and a website. Some is done in more personal ways: signing sessions, library
Writing Magazine1 min read
Bear Truths
After publishing two fantasy novels, my first nonfiction book is now out, published by Troubador, writes subscriber Annie Percik. Meditations on Being Amazing is a hug of a book, written in the wise and supportive voice of my giant teddy bear, Stanl

Related