In America: Travels with John Steinbeck by Geert Mak (Translated by Liz Waters) - review by D D Guttenplan

D D Guttenplan

Hi Ho, Rocinante

In America: Travels with John Steinbeck

By

Harvill Secker 550pp £25
 

In late 1960, in those uneasy weeks between John F Kennedy’s September speech to Protestant ministers in Houston – where he assured them, ‘I am not the Catholic candidate for president. I am the Democratic Party’s candidate for president who happens also to be a Catholic’ – and Boynton v Virginia, the US Supreme Court’s ruling that segregation on public transportation was illegal, the novelist John Steinbeck drove off to look for America. At fifty-eight, with Of Mice and Men (1937), The Grapes of Wrath (1939) and East of Eden (1952) long behind him, Steinbeck was not in a good way. His speech was sometimes slurred and his fingertips were often too numb to hold his cigarette; during what seems to have been a minor stroke he even passed out and started a small fire. His third wife, Elaine, decided he was too ill to handle his seventeen-foot Boston Whaler.

Yet he refused to go down without a fight, telling friends, ‘I am going to get a truck. I am going to drive all of this country by myself. I am going to leave her here. I am a man. I will not be a boy,’ and other similar declarations

Sign Up to our newsletter

Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.

Follow Literary Review on Twitter