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The Pastures of Heaven

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1946 edition

The Pastures of Heaven is a short story cycle by John Steinbeck, first published in 1932, consisting of twelve interconnected stories about a valley in Monterey, California, which was discovered by a Spanish corporal while chasing runaway Indian slaves. Enchanted by the valley's natural beauty, the corporal names it Las Pasturas del Cielo or "The Pastures of Heaven." The stories are written in classic Steinbeck style; the lives of the families that relocate to the valley are portrayed with a mixture of humor and poignance. A recurring theme in the book is the pain caused when people try ineptly to help or to please others.

In the arts

  • In Junius Maltby, one of the characters regards Robert Louis Stevenson's Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes as one of the single greatest works of English literature and eventually names his infant son Robert Louis. Later on, Steinbeck was inspired by Stevenson in choosing to title his account of his cross-country voyage with a gray-haired poodle in the 1960s, Travels With Charley: In Search of America.

Legacy

The grounds of the schoolhouse in which many chapters are set is still in use by the Washington Union School District where fourth and fifth grade are taught.

Adaptations

A stage adaptation of The Pastures of Heaven done as a collaboration between the California Shakespeare Festival and Word for Word (a company that stages short stories literally word for word) premiered in Orinda, CA in June of 2010. The script was by Octavio Solis, and it was directed by the Shakespeare Festival's artistic director Jonathan Moscone.