John Steinbeck

The Limits and Freedoms of Literary Regionalism: John Steinbeck’s Salinas Valley
|

The Limits and Freedoms of Literary Regionalism: John Steinbeck’s Salinas Valley

Known for his simplistically powerful writing style, Steinbeck is perhaps known even more widely for his commitment to his hometown of Salinas, California. With this in mind, Steinbeck’s first short story cycle, The Pastures of Heaven, is an ideal entry point, as it is an early example of his interest in diverse characters and events occupying a shared space.

Men walking around in desert under blue sky.
| | | | | |

Writ in Water: Interview with Chris McCormick and “Desert Boys”

This month, I chat with author Chris McCormick, whose terrific debut of linked stories, Desert Boys, follows main character Daley “Kush” Kushner and his friends Robert Karinger and Dan Watts. The book is largely set in the growing desert suburbia of the Antelope Valley, 70-odd miles north of Los Angeles. We talk about what it…

Round-Down: North Carolina and Idaho Schools Face Proposed Book Bans

Round-Down: North Carolina and Idaho Schools Face Proposed Book Bans

Concerns over the age-appropriateness of books is nothing new. Efforts to ban books are perennial attempts of, assumedly, those worried about a book’s potential to negatively impact a reader too young to access its merit. At Melville House, Taylor Sperry discusses the recent attempt at banning Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner and John Steinbeck’s Of…