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John Steinbeck beat Sanora Babb to the great American Dust Bowl novel—using her field notes. What do we owe her today? Mark Athitakis asks: It is likely, but by no means certain, that in May 1938, the two writers met in a café near Arvin, California. “Both were in town to chronicle the plight of migrants who were flooding the state to escape the decimation of the Dust Bowl. Both were writing fiction about it—Steinbeck had abandoned two novels on the subject earlier that year, while Babb had received an enthusiastic response from Random House for the opening chapters of her novel in progress, ‘Whose Names Are Unknown.’ And both were connected to Tom Collins, a staffer at the Farm Security Administration (FSA), a federal agency providing aid to the migrants. To Steinbeck, Collins was a friend and a passkey to the migrant experience. To Babb, he was a mentor and supervisor; she had volunteered to document living conditions in the camps.” “What happened next is in some ways clear as day, in others frustratingly fuzzy,” Athitakis writes. “The clear part is a tale of profound literary unfairness: Steinbeck received FSA field notes, compiled largely (but not entirely) from Babb’s observations and interviews, after which he began a punishing 100-day writing sprint to produce ‘The Grapes of Wrath,’ the foundational American novel about the Great Depression. Babb’s book, delivered later, would be scotched.” “Over time, an understandably frustrated Babb would insist that she, not Collins, had personally handed over the reports to Steinbeck—an act that would make his appropriation look more brazen and personal,” Athitakis continues. “Tom asked me to give him my notes,” Babb would write 40 years after that alleged café meeting. “I did. Naïve me.” “It doesn’t appear that Steinbeck ever wrote about meeting Babb, or even mentioned her by name, though it’s plausible that two diligent reporters on the same beat would want to compare notes,” Athitakis writes. But questions remain about how much of “Grapes” was written on the back of the FSA notes, how much of that research was Babb’s, and how much it matters. Read more on @The Atlantic  📷: Courtesy Joanne Dearcopp #SanoraBabb #JohnSteinbeck #TheGrapesOfWrath #Authors #Writers #Books #LiteraryMasterpiece #FamousBooks #TheDustBowl #California #History #Mystery #HistoriesMysteries #Trending #Viral #fyp
John Steinbeck beat Sanora Babb to the great American Dust Bowl novel—using her field notes. What do we owe her today? Mark Athitakis asks: It is likely, but by no means certain, that in May 1938, the two writers met in a café near Arvin, California. “Both were in town to chronicle the plight of migrants who were flooding the state to escape the decimation of the Dust Bowl. Both were writing fiction about it—Steinbeck had abandoned two novels on the subject earlier that year, while Babb had received an enthusiastic response from Random House for the opening chapters of her novel in progress, ‘Whose Names Are Unknown.’ And both were connected to Tom Collins, a staffer at the Farm Security Administration (FSA), a federal agency providing aid to the migrants. To Steinbeck, Collins was a friend and a passkey to the migrant experience. To Babb, he was a mentor and supervisor; she had volunteered to document living conditions in the camps.” “What happened next is in some ways clear as day, in others frustratingly fuzzy,” Athitakis writes. “The clear part is a tale of profound literary unfairness: Steinbeck received FSA field notes, compiled largely (but not entirely) from Babb’s observations and interviews, after which he began a punishing 100-day writing sprint to produce ‘The Grapes of Wrath,’ the foundational American novel about the Great Depression. Babb’s book, delivered later, would be scotched.” “Over time, an understandably frustrated Babb would insist that she, not Collins, had personally handed over the reports to Steinbeck—an act that would make his appropriation look more brazen and personal,” Athitakis continues. “Tom asked me to give him my notes,” Babb would write 40 years after that alleged café meeting. “I did. Naïve me.” “It doesn’t appear that Steinbeck ever wrote about meeting Babb, or even mentioned her by name, though it’s plausible that two diligent reporters on the same beat would want to compare notes,” Athitakis writes. But questions remain about how much of “Grapes” was written on the back of the FSA notes, how much of that research was Babb’s, and how much it matters. Read more on @The Atlantic 📷: Courtesy Joanne Dearcopp #SanoraBabb #JohnSteinbeck #TheGrapesOfWrath #Authors #Writers #Books #LiteraryMasterpiece #FamousBooks #TheDustBowl #California #History #Mystery #HistoriesMysteries #Trending #Viral #fyp

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