A Conversation for Of Mice and Men - the Novel by John Steinbeck
Novel as play
EwenMc Started conversation Apr 20, 2005
In the introduction to Burning Bright, Steinbeck writes that both Of Mice And Men and Burning Bright were written with a self-imposed constraint: To be like a play but not in script form. This limited the number of scenes and characters and divided the works into 'acts'. Unlike a script, he gave himself scope to include lengthy descriptive passages. He hoped the genre would catch on.
I guess this is why Of Mice and Men so successfully transfers to the stage and screen. (I liked the original, B&W version).
Novel as play
DJR Posted Apr 20, 2005
absolutely true, and all of the acts of a play can be clearly made out as the separate chapters in the book.
Novel as play
longshotlove Posted Aug 28, 2007
that was a fine writer working. as such it echoes
tennesee williams, arthur miller (not so much henry)
here i'm sad because the mores that banned h. m. are still
just the same as before, limiting and censuring.
so much more that Coupling is like a 'Friends with lager'
which is all right but -- there's still no actual coupling in that.
as people can only come into the world via sexuality,
i can say this with an utter and total lack of "profanity" and STILL run the risk of being censored. this is sad for everyone,
considering that it is the core of what Steinbeck was talking about.
--- without saying anything
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Novel as play
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