Steinbeck also worked as a war correspondent during World War II for the New York Herald Tribune, and again during the Vietnam Conflict. He was requested by President Lyndon Baines Johnson to go to the war zone so that he could provide accurate reports. Both of his sons served in Vietnam, so he was happy to go. He wrote articles about the conflict for “Newsday,” and was criticized by the “New York Post” for betraying his liberal past because he agreed with the Vietnam policies of President Johnson.
One of Steinbeck’s last works was a travel journal from a 1960 road trip that he took to rediscover America. Called, “Travels with Charley,” the book chronicles his coast-to-coast trip with his beloved poodle named Charley. His last major novel, “The Winter of Our Discontent,” was published in 1961. The critics did not like the book and began to view Steinbeck as a has-been.
Over his career, Steinbeck, whose love of literature and reading was fostered by his mother, wrote 25 books, including novels, non-fiction, and short story collections. He won the California Commonwealth Club’s Gold Medal for best novel by an author from California for “Tortilla Flat,” and he won the Pulitzer Prize for “The Grapes of Wrath. He also won the Nobel Prize in 1962 and the Medal of Freedom from President Lyndon Johnson in 1964.
Steinbeck was a private person, and he didn’t enjoy the limelight and the publicity that came with being a successful author. In addition, he never really felt that he deserved the honors that his work brought. He was married three times. In 1930, he married Carol Henning, but the marriage ended in divorce in 1942. His second wife, singer Gwynn Conger gave him two sons, Thomas Myles Steinbeck and John Steinbeck IV, but this marriage also ended in divorce. He married Elaine Scott Steinbeck, former wife of actor Zachary Scott in 1950, and they remained married until his death in 1968.
Elaine was married to Zachery Scott (1914-1965) not Randolph. Elaine and he had a daughter, Waverly.
Herb Behrens
By: Herb Behrens on May 28, 2009
at 7:12 pm
Thank you. I made correction.
By: keverett on June 2, 2009
at 8:30 pm