Today, nearly forty years after his death, Nobel Prize winner John Steinbeck remains one of America’s greatest writers and cultural figures. We have begun publishing his many works for the first time as blackspine Penguin Classics featuring eye-catching, newly commissioned art. This season we continue with the seven spectacular and influential books East of Eden, Cannery Row, In Dubious Battle, The Long Valley, The Moon Is Down, The Pastures of Heaven, and Tortilla Flat. Penguin Classics is proud to present these seminal works to a new generation of readers—and to the many who revisit them again and again.
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Review Summary: Rookie Home Run
Review: I have long considered this to be my all time favorite book. I don't deny that Steinbeck refined his craft, publishing a more polished Cannery Row (and then Sweet Thursday) some years and decades later, however, there is something refreshing about Tortilla Flat in it's unpolished way. I would not recommend this book blindly to anyone. It's not a book for critics, and literary fellows. No one's going to make this part of a college reading list. But there is something wholy American about John Steinbeck, and that makes Tortilla Flat something like a Declaration of Independence - the words what started it all.
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Review Summary: A Short Novella - And Buy It Bundled with Other Works
Review: This is Steinbeck's fourth novel or more accurately a novella. It is not one that would be ranked among his best and it is far below his best known novel "Grapes of Wrath" or his other famous novella "Of Mice and Men," which was his first novel. I have read most of his works including the present, which is an interesting but not a must read for Steinbeck fans. It has interesting prose and good drama but not great, and I would rank it behind, "The Red Pony," and of course below "Cannery Row," and "The Moon is Down." It is similar in style and structure and moral implications to Steinbeck's "The Pearl."
It is set in northern California, in Monterey, and it is set partly in a small town and partly in a rural settings. The story is about a mixture of Spanish, Indian, Mexican and Caucasians that lived basically as beggars or doing odd jobs and who lived in shacks. It is part entertainment and part a morality lesson.
John Steinbeck (1902 - 1968) was among the best known American writers of the 20th century. He won the 1962 Nobel Prize for literature. His 1939 Pulitzer Prize winning novel, "Grapes of Wrath" has over ten million copies in print.
Steinbeck was born in rural California, went to Stanford, and spent most of his life in California. He has been associated with the plight of farm workers and others. His books have been very popular and many were made into movies and stage productions. He won an Academy Award nomination for best story in 1944.
I have read a number of his novels and am still surprised with the quality of his work - especially his short stories and short novels. The present work is short and probably ranks among the middle or bottom of his 17 novels and novellas.
It is not a heavy read and takes one evenings to read. I liked the book and but give it only a neutral recommendation, and it would not be high on my list of Steinbeck novels.
As a suggestion, do not buy the book alone, but rather would buy it as part of a collection such as Steinbeck's book: "The Short Novels of John Steinbeck," from Viking Press in 1953, and updated versions of that book.
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Review Summary: beautiful
Review: I picked this up after reading East of Eden this past summer. I loved that, but probably enjoyed Tortilla Flat even more. I read this in a weekend and couldn't put it down. The characters are funny, but frequently also very touching. Read this book, you won't be let down.
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Review Summary: Not Quite Camelot
Review: It took me longer than I expected to finish reading this book. Its very slow paced in its narration and I went into it know it was some sort of ananlogy for Camelot--so I kept expecting more obvious links to the British legends. But it is not Camelot, though as I read further I did finally see what people were refering to. Danny's house is like a round table that attracts all sorts--deep down they have good hearts (except maybe Big Joe Portagee...) and good deeds are done by them. Though often with much mayhem beforehand.
The set up is very similar to "Cannery Row" in how Steinbeck lets the story unfold. There is one man with the power--in this case Torellei with his gallons of cheap wine that the group of guys is always drinking. There is a house that they share. And the chapters are mostly self contained short stories but also follow a plot arc of the whole book.
As I read further I enjoyed the book more, it took me about half way through to really appreciate what Steinbeck was doing. The entrance of the character, The Pirate, was possibly what really drew me in. He is fantastic! A man who is a bit slow of mind but with a sold gold heart, who also has five very loyal canine friends. I'd reccomend people read this book just for the chance to meet this character.
Pilon is also another brilliant character, he is wiley and smart and often selfish until an opportunity for the greater good comes along.
Not my favorite Steinbeck novel, but certainly was worth reading.
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Review Summary: Great read
Review: Tortilla Flat is a gripping tale of a group of scoundrels who are only looking out for themselves. They live in the old, rundown part of Monterey which is known as Tortilla Flat. The main character, Danny, inherits two houses which brings his so-called "friends" to his side. They embark on many wild and ever memorable adventures which are driven by greed and the need to take from others to better themselves.