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BACKGROUND
John
Steinbeck's East of Eden was published for the first time
by Viking Press in September 1952, ten years before the writer was
awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, and has never been out of
print since. In November 1952 East of Eden was number one on the
fiction best-seller list.
In
A Journal of a Novel: The East of Eden Letter, the writer's
diary of East of Eden, Steinbeck calls the novel ...the
story of my country and the story of me. The book spans the
history of the nation from the Civil War to World War I and tells
the story of two American families, The Hamiltons, Steinbeck's matenal
relatives, are the Universal Family and the fictional
Trasks are the Universal Neighbors.
Steinbeck's
inspiration for the novel comes from the Bible, the fourth chapter
of the book of Genesis, verses one though sixteen, which recounts
the story of Cain and Abel. The title, East of Eden, was
chosen by Steinbeck from Genesis, Chapter 4, verse 16.
The
novel was originally addressed to Steinbeck's young sons, Thom and
John IV (then 6 1/2 and 4 1/2 respectively). Steinbeck wanted to
describe the Salinas Valley for them in detail: the sights, sounds,
smells, and colors.
Steinbeck
called East of Eden a sort of autobiography of the
Salinas Valley.
East
of Eden begins in 1862 and covers three generations and 56 years.
The book ends in salinas, California, in 1918.
The
theme of East of Eden: All novels, all poetry, are
built on the never-ending contest in ourselves of good and evil.
Steinbeck
called this book The big one as far as I'm concerned. Always
before I held something back for later. Nothing is held back here.
East
of Eden is an allegorical/realistic novel, a daring combination
of biography and fiction.
Steinbeck
returned to Salinas in February of 1948 to begin intensive research
for what he considered would be his greatest book, East of Eden.
During his stay in Monterey, he drove to Salinas and used the files
of the local newspaper, the Salinas Index-Journal. The novel was
completed in November of 1951.
The
work on East of Eden followed two blows, the death of Edward
Ricketts, Steinbeck's best friend, known as Doc in his
Cannery Row books, and the separation and divorce from his second
wife, Gwyn.
Journal
of a Novel: The East of Eden Letters, the posthumously published
series of letters to Pascal Covici that accompanied the text of
East of Eden, was published in 1969.
WRITING
The book was
written in part in New York City in a four-story brownstone house
on Seventy Second Street. Steinbeck had an upstairs room for writing.
The Steinbecks rented a Victorian two-story family beach house in
Siasconset on Nantucket Island where the writer spent several months
working on his novel.
Chapter 34
of the novel East of Eden was privately printed in 1952 with
the title What is the World's Story about?
The novel East
of Eden has been translated into many languages of the world,
among them Burmese, Chinese, Danish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian,
Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Swedish, Japanese, Norwegian, Serbo-Croatian,
Slovene, and Spanish. Russian scholars are working on the Russian
translation.
The original
manuscript of East of Eden is in the Humanities Research
Center, University of Texas at Austin, Texas.
Steinbeck kept
track of things while writing East of Eden, and this is the
record:
Eleven years of mental gestation
One year of uninterrupted writing
25 dozen pencils
Approximately three dozen reams of paper
350,000 words (before cutting)
About 75,000 words in his work-in-progress journal
And a
rock-hard callus on the middle finger of the writer's right hand.
Steinbeck's
widow, Elaine, in looking back on the year that he worked on the
book, said that his work on the novel affected him deeply. Perhaps
the best way to put it would be to say that it was the last stage
in putting himself back together after the years that had torn him
apart.
As Steinbeck
progressed through the early chapters, he noted that his voice would
be more apparent in this book than in any other because he wanted
it to contain everything he remembered to be true. He would be in
this one and not for one moment pretend not to be.
Steinbeck states
about East of Eden, It has everything in it I have
been able to learn about my craft or profession in all these years.
He further claimed, I think everything else I have written
has been, in a sense, practice for this.
East of
Eden became a best seller so it was a natural for the movies.
East of Eden, the film, was directed and produced by Elia
Kazan and starred James Dean as Cal. The film opens
at approximately Chapter 37 in Part Four of the novel. The film,
shot in part in Salinas, California, was finished and released in
1955. The film has now reached the stature of a classic.
- TELEVISION
PRODUCTION
East
of Eden was adapted for television and presented
on February 8, 9, and 11 in 1981 by ABC.
PUBLICATION
The Bantam paperback edition became a multimillion copy best seller
that later scaled new heights on the strength of the James Dean
movie version.
The musical
version of East of Eden, Here's Where I Belong,
opened March 3, 1968, at the Billy Rose Theater and closed after
one showing.
East of
Eden, a new adaptation for the stage, was performed at Steinbeck
Festival XI and XV by The Western Stage Company of Hartnell College.
Would
you like to buy a copy of East of Eden? Visit the National
Steinbeck Center Museum Store!
Compiled
by Pauline Pearson
June 5, 1990
Revised 6/95
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