DEC 03/JAN 04 - AudioFile
John Steinbeck is famous for The Grapes of Wrath, his archetypal novel of social dislocation and the survival of the spirit. After listening to this audio reissue of America and Americans, it’s clear that he should be just as famous for his nonfiction musings about what makes us the people we are. In this collection of essays and journalistic pieces, he explores all our attributes and produces a fascinating portrait of his country and himself. Henry Strozier reads with a resonant warmth that seduces. He weaves intelligent pacing and a panoply of emotion into the pieces so that it seems that Steinbeck himself is sitting beside you sharing his observations of life. The only drawback is an overly long, repetitive introduction. Once that’s over, this is clear, delightful listening. A.C.S. © AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine
bn.com
February 27, 2002, marked the 100th anniversary of the birth of this great American novelist. To mark the occasion, Viking repackaged six of his fiction works and published this reconstructed book of his selected nonfiction. America and Americans includes stunning pieces about the Great Depression, crisp World War II journalism, and terse word-portraits of fellow Americans Robert Capa and Woody Guthrie.
Louisville Courier-Journal
...captures Steinbeck's fierce and unrelenting moral vision, while providing an intriguing glimpse of the writer's life and work.
These days it's high school kids who devour Steinbeck's books: Of Mice and Men, The Grapes of Wrath, East of Eden. It's a pity that older readers are missing out. Perhaps this collection of Steinbeck's nonfiction will help dust off his star. The book includes the author's Nobel Prize acceptance speech, recollections of friends from Woody Guthrie to Adlai Stevenson, war correspondence from the Blitz to Vietnam and elegies and celebrations of all things American. A bit constrained by topicality, this isn't the best of the man, but it gives us enough of his remarkable voice: clear, strong, colorful, careful. And it hints at the scope of his visionan earnest one, blessedly free of the irony, convolution and cleverness that came after him. He damns all "bored and slothful cynicism" and lauds "the enormous sweetness and violence of the country." It's been too long since any American writer sounded that proud and loving note.
Paul Evans
Publishers Weekly
Few may remember that the Nobel Prize-winning novelist pursued a parallel 30-year career in journalism, but this collection (timed to mark the centennial of Steinbeck's birth) demonstrates that the author was a major journalistic voice in the mid-20th century. Of course, the pieces vary in quality: Steinbeck's travel writing, personal recollections and political journalism are more entertaining than his essays on craft or dated dispatches from war zones, and one questions why the editors, both Steinbeck scholars, chose certain brief reports. Still, Steinbeck's humor shines through in a number of fine essays, especially in one about a visit to his Sag Harbor cottage with two teenage sons, and another on his battles (in print) with a Communist newspaper in Italy. Three reports on the plight of California's migrant workers written in the mid-1930s before Steinbeck had finished The Grapes of Wrath shed light on the novel's roots. A particularly moving essay details the author's long friendship with Ed Ricketts, the man who found his way into Steinbeck's Cannery Row and The Sea of Cortez. The last 100 pages of the collection reprints his final book, America and Americans, in which the author offers a wide-reaching commentary on the American 20th century. "Journalism not only is a respected profession, but is considered the training ground of any good American author," wrote Steinbeck in 1966. Though this statement is no longer true, the collection shows that it certainly once was. (On sale Feb. 4) Forecast: No doubt publicity around Steinbeck's centennial will help sales to new readers as well as devotees. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal
Just in time for the centenary of Steinbeck's birth: a reissue of his last published book and a collection of his journalism. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
February of next year is the centennial of Steinbeck's birth and, along with new Penguin editions of six of his novels, Viking is offering up this collection from the other, lesser-known, side of his career. A lifelong journalist, Steinbeck observed and commented on what he saw around him in essays, letters, and criticism; here is some of the best of it. There's war writing from England and Vietnam; reflections on his own work, including his Nobel acceptance speech; travel pieces from Italy, France, and Ireland; pieces on Henry Fonda, Adlai Stevenson, and Woody Guthrie. While Steinbeck wanders all over the world, most of the material directly addresses America, including the final section, a reprint of his last, now out-of-print book, the heartfelt America and Americans. More than his familiar, iconic fiction, this collection conveys a real sense of one of our best-and best-loved-writers.
From the Publisher
By the Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
"A feast of good reading." —Jay Parini, Los Angeles Times
"Captures Steinbeck's fierce and unrelenting moral vision, while providing an intriguing glimpse of the writer's life and work." —Chicago Tribune
DEC 03/JAN 04 - AudioFile
John Steinbeck is famous for The Grapes of Wrath, his archetypal novel of social dislocation and the survival of the spirit. After listening to this audio reissue of America and Americans, it’s clear that he should be just as famous for his nonfiction musings about what makes us the people we are. In this collection of essays and journalistic pieces, he explores all our attributes and produces a fascinating portrait of his country and himself. Henry Strozier reads with a resonant warmth that seduces. He weaves intelligent pacing and a panoply of emotion into the pieces so that it seems that Steinbeck himself is sitting beside you sharing his observations of life. The only drawback is an overly long, repetitive introduction. Once that’s over, this is clear, delightful listening. A.C.S. © AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine