At the age of 13 most children are still simple about their future self career. However, in 1915, a 13 year old boy was encouraged to become a writer by his English teacher (French 1). Without knowing the teacher, the boy can be said to be the same author as Lawrence, John Keats, or William Faulkner. This boy is John Steinbeck. The time of Steinbeck was an era of isolation and sorrow, but the era of economic conflict and despair of global conflict brought Steinbeck many opportunities.
His father, John Ernst Steinbeck (1862-1935), served as treasurer in Monterrey County. John's mother, former school teacher, Olive Hamilton (1867-1934), told Steinbeck's passion for reading and writing. Steinbeck later became an agnostic, but Steinbeck is a member of the British Church. Steinbeck lives in a rural town, but it is a settlement of borders on the most fertile land in the world. He worked in a nearby ranch in the summer and later worked with a migrant worker on a Spreckels sugar bean farm. So he learned about the more serious aspects of immigrant life and the dark side of human nature. And it provided him with materials expressed in works like "Mouse and Human". He explores the surrounding environment and moves through local forests, fields and farms. While working at the Spreckels Sugar Company, he sometimes worked in their laboratory, so I had time to write. He has quite a mechanical ability and loves what he has.
In the 1920s and 1930s, John Steinbeck traveled to the United States to use the news technology to investigate the lives of forgotten Americans, especially the working class and the poor. Steinbeck has transformed these experiences into some of the most symbolic works of American realism, including "mice and men". Since the establishment of the country there was huge hope and hope for America's prosperity in that land Anyone (and the image is almost always an image of a person) if only he is happy to draw infinite wealth from his land I can. This work: I sweat for his land and bleeding. This is America, it is the most direct opportunity