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Grapes of Wrath: Fiftieth Anniversary Edition

Author: Steinbeck, John
Date Published: 1989


The classic novel written by John Steinbeck in 1939 about the plight of migrant workers during the Dust Bowl Era in the United States. Set during the Great Depression, it traces the migration of an Oklahoma Dust Bowl family to California and their subsequent hardships as migrant farm workers. It won a Pulitzer Prize in 1940. The work did much to publicize the injustices of migrant labor. The narrative, interrupted by prose-poem interludes, chronicles the struggles of the Joad family's life on a failing Oklahoma farm, their difficult journey to California, and their disillusionment once they arrive there and fall prey to a parasitic economic system. The insularity of the Joads--Ma's obsession with family togetherness, son Tom's self-centeredness, and daughter Rose of Sharon's materialism--ultimately gives way to a sense of universal community This edition includes an introduction by Studs Terkel

Price: loan
Number of Pages: 581