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  1. Cannery Row, published in 1945, is a novel by Nobel Prize winning American author John Steinbeck. It is set during the Great Depression in Monterey, California, and follows the lives of a group of characters who live on a street called Cannery Row. The novel is episodic in nature, with each chapter focusing on a different character or group of ...

  2. In Cannery Row, Steinbeck is concerned first and foremost with capturing what it feels like to be alive in Monterey, California sometime before World War II. Rather than writing a completely cohesive narrative or adding complex literary embellishments, he simply presents readers with a series of linked vignettes that, when assembled, create an ...

  3. John Steinbeck’s 1945 novel “Cannery Row” put Monterey’s famous sardine-canning street in the spotlight, immortalizing fictional characters like Doc Ricketts and local grocer Lee Chong. The book also inspired a 1982 film featuring Nick Nolte and Debra Winger, plus countless magazine articles exploring the district’s evolution. Today, Cannery Row is one of Monterey’s most popular […]

  4. Cannery Row, novel by John Steinbeck, published in 1945. Like most of Steinbeck’s postwar work, Cannery Row is sentimental in tone while retaining the author’s characteristic social criticism. Peopled by stereotypical good-natured bums and warm-hearted prostitutes living on the fringes of Monterey,

  5. Cannery Row. John Steinbeck’s novel Cannery Row immortalized the sardine-canning business that was Monterey’s lifeblood for the first half of the 20th century. A bronze bust of the Pulitzer Prize–winning writer sits at the bottom of Prescott Ave, just steps from the unabashedly touristy experience that the famous row has devolved into.

  6. Feb 1, 1993 · Cannery Row. Mass Market Paperback – February 1, 1993. by John Steinbeck (Author) 4.4 8,289 ratings. Book 1 of 2: Cannery Row. See all formats and editions. Unburdened by the material necessities of the more fortunate, the denizens of Cannery Row discover rewards unknown in more traditional society.

  7. Summary: Chapters 1–4. Cannery Row opens with a small set piece that functions almost like a landscape painting; the mood of the place is carefully described, most of the major characters are seen strolling across the screen, and the general tone of the story is set. The introduction ends with a description of how Steinbeck has written this ...

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