Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

New Light on John Steinbeck at Stanford’s Green Library

John Steinbeck © 1954 Yousuf Karsh

A trove of documents acquired by Stanford University—the S.J. Neighbors Collection of John Steinbeck papers, 1859-1999—adds dramatic detail to a literary life story that started in 19th century Germany and Palestine and became synonymous with 20th century California and America. Totaling 256 items, the acquisition is the largest since 1999, when Wells Fargo gave a major collection of Steinbeck material to the newly renovated Green Library, which first opened in 1919, the year Steinbeck enrolled at Stanford as a freshman. The new collection includes correspondence to and from John Steinbeck, notebooks kept by his American grandmother, Almira Steinbeck, and lecture notes written by her earnest, German-born husband about their missionary work in Palestine and the attack on their compound in Jaffa that sent them packing for the United States, just in time for the outbreak of the Civil War. According to Rebecca Wingfield, curator of British and American literature, the addition of the S.J. Neighbors collection makes the Stanford University Library the most important resource anywhere for research on Steinbeck’s roots. Her colleague Ben Stone, curator of American and British history, notes that the school’s commitment to Steinbeck includes access to the collection by regular readers of the restless writer who never got around to telling his paternal grandparents’ story and disappointed his family by leaving Stanford without a degree.



This post first appeared on Steinbeck Now — An International Community Of John Steinbeck Lovers, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

New Light on John Steinbeck at Stanford’s Green Library

×

Subscribe to Steinbeck Now — An International Community Of John Steinbeck Lovers

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×