How to use interchapters John Grinbeck 's "The Grapes of Wrath" in Angry Grapes is a story about the Joaad family traveling from Oklahoma to California. However, during many story chapters Steinbeck inserted a gap. And it interrupted the flow of the story to provide authors' comments. This technique is very effective as it can create economic and social historical images that affect the story. They provide numerous immigrants to California on route 66.
John Steinbeck has never told the reader in his novel "The Grapes of Wrath" the feelings that Tom Thod's idea might bring. What we get is that his behavior, what he said, and an explanation, for example, a turtle squatting in the dust in the early cross. Tortoises is a symbol of Jod's own behavior in the whole novel. David Lodge explains how symbols work in his book "The Art of Fiction" (Penguin 1994, p. 138-141). He got a word from a woman in the love of D. H. Lawrence. Gerald is proud, angry, arrogant, but Lawrence does not use these abstract words. The image of his character's attempt to conquer Mare is enough to show these emotions and features to the reader. The words used by Lawrence are also sexually suggestive. "In the end he pulled down her, sank her and took her back to Mark."
In "The Grapes of Wrath" Steinbeck uses the experience of migrant workers to share important information with readers. By showing such an event, he showed that life is a mixture of cruelty and beauty. This is the unified theme of 'angry grape', especially at the end of chapter 12. Through this book Steinbeck is trying to prove that good and evil still exist in evil. The most deeply moving example is the last scene of the book. There, Rosasarn is breastfeeding a dead man despite his loss. In general, the roles of Steinbeck can be divided into two categories. They are just the people who do their best to help themselves and the people who work together to help themselves and others. For example, in Steinbeck's work, greedy bank owners and crop producers who use immigrants show bad meaning. Steinbeck's message is that people should cooperate in order to combat this evil.