The entire matter illuminates the failure of a greatly talented writer to develop into a major novelist-a failure that has puzzled many Steinbeck readers. All of this appears to have had grave consequences in a good deal of Steinbeck's later work. Apparently he felt that he had structured the novel rigidly that this was a good way to achieve structure that only the stupidity of a mass audience obscured the issue. Moreover, the somewhat ugly commercial success of Tortilla Flat turned Steinbeck against the novel as it really is. In short, there is very little of Morte d'Arthur in Tortilla Flat. Adopting the structure and themes of the Arthurian legend, John Steinbeck created a Camelot on a shabby hillside above the town of Monterey, California, and peopled it with a colorful band of knights. For, in fact, the novel is loose and episodic, and a sophisticated comic irony is used to locate socioeconomic and Catholic values in a colorful paisano community. His continued insistence that a parallel to Malory's Morte d'Arthur does control the novel, and his reliance in later work on predetermined, external, and arbitrary ordering devices, make it sadly apparent that he did not learn much about structural harmony from Tortilla Flat. It was John Steinbeck’s fourth novel, first published in 1935. The novel's promise was dimmed by Steinbeck's evident inability to understand his real success. Tortilla Flat by John Steinbeck Published on ApTortilla Flat was my Classics Club Spin book to read by 30th April. Tortilla Flat (1935) was John Steinbeck's first artistic and commercial success.
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