Steinbeck sets out on the journey in the fall of 1959 and drives a route that essentially outlines the US. While the book only touches on Indigenous issues, certain scenes could be viewed as minimizing the impact of white settlement in the West, which some may find upsetting. The book uses outdated language to refer to Black and Indigenous Americans and includes the N-word when quoting white locals Steinbeck interacted with in the South the guide doesn’t reproduce this language, however. This guide is based on the 2012 Penguin Classics 50th-Anniversary Edition of the book.Ĭontent Warning: This guide references the book’s depictions of anti-Black racism and the Southern white response to the civil rights movement. Like most of Steinbeck’s books, Travels With Charley was immensely popular. As a nonfiction travelogue, the book’s authenticity has been questioned, but nevertheless, Travels With Charley is a classic piece of American literature by one of the country’s most celebrated authors. His skill in describing landscapes and the emotions they evoke is particularly valuable in this context. Thus, while he isn’t known as a nonfiction writer, his ability to synthesize complex topics into thought-provoking prose makes Travels With Charley a valuable look into the mid-20th-century American milieu. Steinbeck became famous for writing about the experience of average Americans, particularly during the Great Depression.
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