jethrien: (Default)
Title: The Pearl/The Red Pony
Author: John Steinbeck
Genre: Classic literary fiction
Thingummies: 3.5
Synopsis: Two beautifully written, horribly depressing novellas, one about a poor Mexican family ruined by the discovery of a valuable pearl and one about a boy growing up on a ranch.

Thoughts: I've read a fair amount of Steinbeck. He has beautiful, clean prose (rather similar to Hemingway, actually--I suspect that may come from being contemporaries). He's also the author most likely to make you want to slit your wrists at the end in despair for the hopelessness of the world, so keep that in mind.

In "The Pearl", Steinbeck's in his "things go from bad to worse" mode. The story leads off with a baby being stung by a scorpion and kind of goes downhill from there. The racism that helps condemn the family is entirely believable yet appalling. It's not his best work--I found it rather heavy handed, and the ending is telegraphed from a mile away.

"The Red Pony" is actually not a unified work. Upon discovering that it's actually four short stories about the same characters instead of four chapters of one book, I liked it rather better. There's no plot arc amongst the stories--one calls back to an earlier one a bit, but overall they're not terribly connected. So I was dismayed that events from the previous stories are not really referred to in the final story. (Actually, I'm kind of baffled by the order they put these in. I feel like they really should have ended in "The Promise" instead of "The Leader of the People".)

Typical Steinbeck, it's still on the depressing side. The stories are about a kid growing up through exposure to death and disappointment. But imagery is so vivid, I still found it appealing. I loved the passage about Jody the mighty hunter gradually filling his lunch bucket with captured frogs and lizards, that "scrabbled unhappily against the tin", only to be forgotton and left for his horrified mother to discover.

This really shouldn't be the first Steinbeck someone reads, and it's certainly not his strongest. Go read Of Mice and Men. If you feel sick and jumping off a bridge sounds like a good idea (and a valid alternative to reading more Steinbeck), don't come back. If you find the quiet poetry of his simply constructed sentences and his writing makes your soul ache for the loneliness and beauty of the world, then read "The Red Pony"I'm not sure "The Pearl" is as much worth your time unless you're a completist, but they're both quite short, so it's not like it's much of an investment.

Date: 2011-04-24 02:28 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] fyrna.livejournal.com
I think we read The Pearl in school. I don't remember anything about it, though.

Date: 2011-04-24 02:42 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
Wouldn't surprise me. It's by a classic author, it's really short, and the symbolism is really, really easy to unpack.

Date: 2011-04-24 02:46 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] fyrna.livejournal.com
Um. Symbolism of any kind went right over my head. English was not my best subject... I'm great at grammar and rhetoric lessons! But that was not to focus of our English classes.

Date: 2011-04-24 01:22 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
Keeping pearl=aspiring to be above your station. Both result in your humiliating, torturous doom.

Date: 2011-04-25 09:04 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] maydove.livejournal.com
I read The Pearl in middle school, but I don't remember too much about it. I read The Grapes of Wrath and East of Eden a while ago--yup, horrifying and depressing. I started reading his compilation America and Americans and should get back to it sometime--he had a somewhat appealing account of surviving the Depression on the California coast.

Date: 2011-04-26 01:46 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
The Winter of Our Discontent and Of Mice and Men, equally horrifying.

Travels with Charley is charming, though.

Date: 2011-04-27 10:20 pm (UTC)From: (Anonymous)
(LJ won't accept my log-in again. This is ya momma.) I agree with most of what you say about Steinbeck. I hated the Red Pony - a book recommended by my mother. I don't know if she understood it. But The Grapes of Wrath has the most beautiful and accurate description I've ever read of coming over the mountains from the desolation of the mid-west into California. And I loved East of Eden. Read it twice, even though it's got a bit of weirdness and sadism, there was something about it that wouldn't let me go. Probably another California thing.

Date: 2011-04-28 02:49 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] jethrien.livejournal.com
I feel like this copy is actually one she bought me at a flea market and somehow I never got around to reading.
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