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The Grapes Of Wrath
The Grapes Of Wrath
Jul 29, 2025 10:25 PM

Author:John Steinbeck,Robert Sheehan,Michelle Fairley,Zubin Varla

The Grapes Of Wrath

Set against the backdrop of America's Great Depression and Dust Bowl, a family of farmers from Oklahoma head west in search of work, only to discover thousands like them are also on the move. Following a violent altercation with some locals, they head back on the road with their dream of a promised land in tatters. And life is set to get much worse for the Joads... John Steinbeck's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about economic migration and the endurance of the human spirit is dramatized by Donna Franceschild and directed by Kirsty Williams.

Reviews

Remarkable…disturbing…fascinating

—— Independent

Nobody is better than Margaret Forster, with her clear calm prose, at delineating the fault lines of the ordinary, unexceptional and hidden lives

—— Jennifer Selway , Daily Express

a mesmerizing, unsettling novel

—— New York Times

Makes such uncomfortable reading that at times you can barely turn the page, but it’s so compelling that you have to

—— Mail on Sunday

Perfectly paced and with superbly drawn characters, this is a compelling story skilfully told

—— Choice

Margaret Forster is a brilliant and prolific writer... her latest novel is one of her best… It's a gripping read

—— Observer

Margaret Forster is a brilliant and prolific writer... her latest novel is one of her best... The book it most reminded me of, curiously enough, was Julian Barnes's The Sense of an Ending... Barnes, of course, won the Booker for his novel. I hope that Margaret Forster gets the recognition she deserves for this one

—— Elizabeth Day , Observer

There is no one to match [Forster] for the way her assured,subtle and careful prose can detail the insecurities, torments and problems of what are, to all surface appearances, just nondescript, unremarkable and often half-lived lives

—— The Lady

Margaret Forster has a deft and idiosyncratic touch

—— Penelope Lively , Spectator

A story which becomes steadily more gripping

—— WI Magazine

A brilliantly uncomfortable read about the art of forgetfulness

—— Emma Hagestadt , Independent

Brilliant... You won't put this book down until its emotional end

—— Siraj Patel , Daily Express

This is a book to make you think. This is a book to forcefully turn you away from mindless entertainment and set you on a journey inwards, where you ask yourself the important questions in life. It's philosophy as fiction... Part of his achievement is down to how fit for purpose his prose is. It is remarkably sparse and yet feels dense, weighted with layers and layers of meaning

—— Irish Independent

[A] moving but mysterious story of a lost childhood... Is it possible to be deeply affected by a book without really knowing what it's about? Before reading J.M. Coetzee's new novel I might have said no - but now I'm not so sure... [As] disquieting as it is moving... [All] I can say is that ever since I finished it, it's been going round and round inside my head like nothing else I've read in ages

—— John Preston , Sunday Telegraph

What JM Coetzee writes matters... [A narrative mode] akin to that of Kafka... At once lucid and elusive

—— David Sexton , Scotland on Sunday

Reading JM Coetzee is like swimming in a sea with a calm surface and a savage undertow. His sentences are lean; his subjects menacing: power, race, animal rights and confession

—— Intelligent Life

Tormented states of mind, ambivalence and guilt stalk his work, as do the dual influences of Kafka and Beckett

—— Eileen Battersby , Irish Times

A retelling of the gospels? A fable about Utopian, Chaves-style socialism? Coeztee moves in mysterious, but mesmerising, ways

—— i

There are knotty concerns here on reading, on order and chaos, on political engagement, on almost anything you can think of. But, “you think too much,” Elena says to Simón. “This has nothing to do with thinking.”... What Coetzee has given us is a book not of answers but of questions... Coetzee’s prose is clean and efficient, driving the reader on through the mazy stasis of life in Novilla. There is plenty of what, to avoid a cliché, we might call Kafkaish stuff... These qualities, combined with the enjoyable and unaccustomed exercise of thinking about the book – wanting to think about it – all the way through, meant that in a strange sense, The Childhood of Jesus is the most fun I’ve had with a novel in ages

—— The Asylum

There aren’t many subjects bigger than the question of faith – and with The Childhood of Jesus, Coetzee appears to have found a subject worthy of his high-level craftsmanship

—— Nadine O'Regan , Sunday Business Post

An intellectual adventure

—— Shanice McBean , Socialist Review

A perversely comic, intellectually profound and obscurely allegorical novel

—— Vivek Santayana , Edinburgh Journal

With elegant ease, Jones spins a good old-fashioned comedy of manners

—— Katie Owen , Sunday Telegraph
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