steinbeck in A Sentence

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    The Moon is Down by John Steinbeck.

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    John Steinbeck 's Of Mice and Men.

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    The Steinbecks were members of the Episcopal Church, although Steinbeck later became agnostic.

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    The Pearl" is based on the John Steinbeck novella of the same name.

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    Undiscouraged, Steinbeck returned to California to begin work as a writer of serious fiction.

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    John's mother, Olive Hamilton(1867-1934), a former school teacher, shared Steinbeck's passion for reading and writing.

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    The Steinbecks were members of the Episcopal Church, although Steinbeck would later become an agnostic.

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    Steinbeck himself wrote the scripts for the film versions of his stories The Pearl(1948) and The Red Pony(1949).

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    Steinbeck's book was considered a huge success, and was covertly translated and disseminated by underground rebels across Europe.

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    Johann Adolf GroSteinbeck(1828-1913), Steinbeck's paternal grandfather, shortened the family name to Steinbeck when he immigrated to the United States.

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    The Blackwing 602 is famous for being used by a lot of writers, especially John Steinbeck and Vladimir Nabokov.

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    Instead, he feels wrung from the hungover imagination of Steinbeck or hatched on the sweaty end of an assembly line.

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    The film section has 09 Steinbeck Editing suits in separate chambers and a large hall with 14 editing tables, synchronizers, splicer's etc.

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    Steinbeck lived in a small rural town, no more than a frontier settlement, set in some of the world's most fertile land.

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    Check out The Moon is Down by John Steinbeck, which was written as a pro-democracy novella for the occupied countries of World War II.

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    You may have already seen the screen version of the novel by John Steinbeck, a classic example of the literature of the Great Depression period.

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    The novelist John Steinbeck(1954) wrote,“Change comes like a little wind that ruffles the curtains at dawn, and it comes like the stealthy perfume of wildflowers hidden in the grass.”.

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    In order to add realism to his Great Depression-era novel The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck lived with an Oklahoma family and traveled with them to California in the name of research.

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    In 1939, when John Steinbeck imagined Highway 66 as“the road of flight,” he evoked the crushing realities of Depression-era migrants who would been pushed off their land by failing crops, relentless dust, and heartless banks.

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    Later, Steinbeck uses the grapes to symbolize the growing unrest in the clash between the migrant workers and the larger farmers, who are withholding an opportunity of a better life from these destitute and desperate people.

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    Widely considered Steinbeck's finest and most ambitious novel, this book tells the story of a dispossessed Oklahoma family and their struggle to carve out a new life in California at the height of the Great Depression, the book captured the mood and angst of the nation during this time period.

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    Much of this first construction was destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake but the University retains the Quad, the old Chemistry Building(which is not in use and has been boarded up since the 1989 earthquake), and Encina Hall(the residence of Herbert Hoover, John Steinbeck, and Anthony Kennedy during their times at Stanford).

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