Angry grapes' In the souls of people, angry grapes are growing steadily and steadily over the years. This sentence explains the whole book. It shows that people are fighting for life from the many difficulties they face. In addition, it shows that there are ups and downs in life, sometimes facing the anger that life brings to us. The first difficulty in the book was when Jod was obliged to leave their country. They must overcome their lost houses and basic lives.
The "graceful grape" suggested by the title indicates that the burden of family and anger are intertwined due to difficulties due to the Great Depression. An angry grape shows how difficult life is during the Great Depression. All the family members are suffering. It specifically states that banks will acquire all small farmers and forcibly abandon their land. This shows what the embarrassment of the economic system during the Great Depression was. The theme family like "The Grapes of Wrath" has no choice.
John Steinbeck's novel "Anger's Grape" is a concrete story of the Joad family, telling the suffering and repression of migrant workers during the Great Depression. This is a clear political activity, collective action to support the lower class. Steinbeck's novel criticizes shortsighted self-interests to maximize profits and ultimately drive farmers even to poverty and starvation when adopting such a social position, and the company or bank elite I will punish you.
035799 Screaming and other works of 1936 - 1941: Yangtze River; angry grapes; Cortez sea logs; harvested gypsy Steinbeck, John was presented in newly revised text according to writers manuscripts, type scripts and kitchen Angry grape gypsy harvest is Steinbeck's investigation - 035788 Novels and stories 1932-1937: Suspicious battle, mouse and male Steinbeck, paradise ranch, God does not know, Tortilla Flat, John is here, Stebeck's Work in early California is early days. These five works depict the evolution of Steinbeck as one of the greatest and most popular novelists in the United States. 909 pgs. • 1994