I think that these titles are good examples of ones that are overlooked (I said overlooked, not discounted) by people who have heard of them, but not read them on account of their scary "classics" designations. ("Classics = hard, dry times with odd, old language and antique words)
I personally loved East of Eden, although it was a tad odd in places.
____________________________________ "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. ... Explore. Dream. Discover." -- Mark Twain
Posts: 1215 | Location: Canada | Registered: 10 January 2005
Steinbeck can be great -- as in some of the books whose titles have already been named above -- but some of his stuff can be way off the mark. I classify him as a Jekyll-and-Hyde author, from high points like The Log from the Sea of Cortez (a great travel book, by the way) to the lows of The Winter of Our Discontent.
Posts: 341 | Location: Los Angeles, Calif | Registered: 16 July 2006