In "East of Eden" of John Steinbeck, the author always advocates the theory of mankind within the battle of good and evil, and ultimately has to choose the party where they are. As a human, uncertainty and confusion are the two main factors of our decision. It is not easy for us to get absorbed in contradictory paths and influences. In "Eden East", the complex functions of Kartrask are pulled in two opposite directions. He fought against evil ancestors, but tried to compete with the kindness of his perfect brother Aaron.
East of Eden is a novel published by John Steinbeck who won the Nobel prize in September 1952. Eastern part of Eden, which is well described as Steinbeck's most ambitious novel, brings in complex details of two families, Trusk and Hamilton and their intertwined stories. The novel was originally written for Steinbeck 's infant, Tom and John (six and a half and four and a half respectively, respectively). Steinbeck wants to explain in detail the Salinas Valley. According to his third and last wife Elaine, Steinbeck thinks that this is his great. Steinbeck talks about the eastern part of Eden: "It has everything, I have been able to understand my skills and occupations for years," he further insisted. "
East of Eden is the twelfth novel by John Steinbecks, he wrote on two young sons, Tom and John Steinbeck. This is a magnificent story in the narrow Salinas Valley in Northern California, a story of the fate of the intertwining of the two families, Trusk and Hamilton. John Steinbeck, the author of the novel, believes that the eastern part of Eden is his wonderful work and claims that all his other works are ways of writing this work (Broome 66). One of the themes of the novel is a consistent struggle of mankind on the way to good and evil. Steinbeck depicts the inevitable struggle of good and evil in society, but it also focuses on the struggle occurring within each individual. The purpose of this paper is to analyze how John Steinbeck's novel "The East of the Garden of Eden" explains the fight between good and evil.