A Good Short Story
★★★★★
Cannery Row (1945) is a local color novel about ordinary people in Monterey, California at that time. Until 1945, the United States experienced social convulsions: two world huge wars, the Prohibition, the Depression and so forth. These events influence this story: two huge wars lead Taoism to Steinbeck, the Prohibition creates the importance of Alcohol in this story, and the personae in Cannery Row cannot escape from the influence of the Depression.
Compared to The Grapes of Wrath, I think, Cannery Row has less bitter criticism to American society at that time. However, the characters in the Row attract me more than The Grapes of Wrath. Like Mark Twain’s Adventure of Huckleberry Finn, the boys in the Row seek free, and deny being civilized. Steinbeck makes a point of “uncivilized” Americans, thus you can see the legacy of Twain in this story.