Steinbeck: The Untold Stories (A Steinbeck Now Book)

$12.95
by Steve Hauk

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It’s 1942. The novelist John Steinbeck needs character witnesses to sign his application to carry a gun in New York. He’s received a threatening phone call and feels the need for self-protection. He’s a relative newcomer to the Empire State – most of his close friends live back in California, so finding people to sign could be difficult for the controversial author. Feeling time is of the essence, he begins his search for character witnesses in the idyllic village of Palisades, where he makes his home. The Application is one of sixteen tales in Steinbeck: The Untold Stories examining the emotional and psychological toll extracted for writing the truth as Steinbeck saw it, in works such as Of Mice and Men and The Grapes of Wrath. From his days in Salinas and Los Gatos and Pacific Grove on California’s Monterey Peninsula to his later years in New York, we meet the people who were important in his life as well as the dark specters of those who opposed him and what he was writing. The stories look at his friends and contemporaries and those who outlived him. Henry, for instance, a boyhood pal who decades later sees John again in a visit to Henry’s Salinas service station under cover of darkness. Or Lily, an old high school classmate who invites him to an impromptu reunion that turns dangerous for John and the other participants gathered in a park. Artists, too, were important in his world. The young couple he gave money to so they could explore Mexico and “learn to paint out loud.” The painter, a giant of a man, who on a summer night carried Steinbeck out of his home after an argument on labor issues. The famous film actress who accompanies him on a nervous drive, from Los Angeles up the Salinas Valley in the light of day. There were those who had little or no contact with him but were influenced and moved by his work. Beau, a charismatic chainsmoking cowboy who proudly felt he inspired the creation of a Steinbeck character. The terminally ill book collector Paul, who finds temporary escape from his worries and responsibilities by searching for Steinbeck first editions. The wanderer Bill who arrives in Monterey and is befriended by those who knew Steinbeck and instruct him in the legacy. Or the gentle woman who looks back seventy years recalling her famous marine biologist father’s relationship with the writer – as well as with his own children. These and other stories are further brought to life by the gritty, character-driven illustrations of artist C. Kline. Images such as John’s mother Olive gathering flowers while remembering a sad day in her youth. A young sailor off an aircraft carrier drinking with two American strangers in a Greek bar while a political coup is underway. A Big Sur trapper tearfully parting with a mountain lion named Flora. Or the writer explaining to a ghost he has no home and never did. These stories and characters provide pathos and humor to the portrait of a great writer dealing with his memories and fears. And – as Steinbeck once described it in a letter to a friend – the powerful desire to begin again and return to the ocean tide pools and star-gazing of his youth. In addition to being a writer of fiction and dealer in art, Steve Hauk is a playwright, documentary screenwriter, and journalist. His plays include A Mild Concussion - the Rapid Rise and Long Fall of an Idealistic Computer Genius, based on the true story of an exploited figure in the computer world, and The Floating Hat, on the relationship of Charlie Chaplin and the deaf artist Granville Redmond. Also, Fortune's Way, or Notes on Art for Catholics (and Others), Reflections of an American Mossad, and recently completed, The Cottages - Scenes from Lives Interrupted. Narrated by the late Jack Lemmon, the films he wrote - Time Captured in Paintings: The Monterey Legacy and The Roots of California Photography: The Monterey Legacy - were winners of CINE Golden Eagles, a national honor for documentary filmmaking out of Washington, D.C. As a journalist he has interviewed figures as diverse as Muhammad Ali, Paul Newman, Dame Judith Anderson, and many people who knew and were friends of John Steinbeck. With his wife Nancy he founded the gallery Hauk Fine Arts in Pacific Grove, California. In 1998 he co-curated with Patricia Leach the inaugural art exhibition at the National Steinbeck Center, This Side of Eden - Images of Steinbeck's California.

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