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To a God Unknown por John Steinbeck
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To a God Unknown

por John Steinbeck

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Blurp: Aan een onbekende God is de geschiedenis van Joseph Wayne, een boerenzoon die met zijn broers en hun vrouwen wegtrekt uit het noorden van de Verenigde Staten naar de uitgestrekte, vruchtbare streken van Californië, om daar in een vallei een nieuw bedrijf te beginnen. Het is her verhaal over de kracht van pioniers, de gebondenheid met de grond, die een middel, maar vooral een reden van bestaan voor hen is. Gefascineerd door de raadselen van de aarde en intensiteit waarmee deze mensen haar bewerken, bewonen en vooral beléven, schreeft John Steinbeck met Aan een onbekende God een van zijn boeiendste romans.
Samenv.: Verhaal over het leven van een boerenzoon, die met zijn broers en hun vrouwen wegtrekt uit het Noorden van de Verenigde Staten om in een Californische vallei een nieuw bestaan op te bouwen.
Samenv.: After receiving a blessing from his dying father, Joseph moves to central California and settles in a valley near a town called Nuestra Señora. Shortly after beginning to build his homestead, he receives a letter from one of his brothers that their father had died, and in that moment Joseph feels that his father's soul enters the large oak tree by his homesite. Joseph's three brothers subsequently move out to the valley with their families, and homestead the adjacent land. One day, the brothers come across a pine forest, and in the center is a quiet, circular glade with a stream flowing out of the large rock. Juanito, a ranch-hand, tells them that it is a sacred place to the indios. Joseph then marries a school-teacher from Monterey named Elizabeth. Upon returning to the farm from the wedding, they find that the youngest brother, Benjy, an alcoholic, had been stabbed and killed by Juanito when he discovered him seducing his wife. When they meet later that night at the sacred rock, Juanito asks Joseph to kill him in revenge for his brother, but Joseph refuses. Joseph wants to pass it off as an accident, and for him to stay, but Juanito flees the farm. For a time, the farm prospers, and Elizabeth bears a child. Joseph's brother, Burton, a devout Christian, becomes increasingly concerned with Joseph's late night 'talks' with the tree. The farm is then the site of a New Year's fiesta, and Burton decides to leave the farm after seeing the 'pagan' activities. After he leaves, the remaining brothers discover that Burton had girdled the tree to kill it. In the following rainless winter everything begins to die as a severe drought sets in. One day, Joseph and Elizabeth visit the glade. Elizabeth decides to climb on the mossy rock, when she falls and breaks her neck, dying instantly. Soon thereafter, Joseph and Thomas decide to drive the cattle out to San Joaquin to find green pastures. At the last minute, Joseph decides to stay, then lives by the rock and watches the stream dry up. Juanito returns and convinces Joseph to visit the town's priest to enlist his help in breaking the drought. The priest refuses to pray for rain, saying that his concern is the salvation of human souls. Joseph returns to the rock to find the stream dry. When trying to saddle his horse, he frightens the animal and receives a cut on the arm from a saddle buckle. Joseph then climbs to the top of the rock and slits his wrists. As he sacrifices himself to some mysterious higher power, he feels the rain begin falling down.
  cowpeace | Apr 25, 2009 |
I can't believe the average rating I see for this book (currently 3.91). I thought it was pretty bad and only of interest because Steinbeck wrote it. Unfortunately, it's Steinbeck in larval form. I can't believe he spent 4 years on this book. Great title, not much else. ( )
  gbill | Mar 19, 2009 |
A wonderful novel that could be called neo-mythology, it is about a family of homesteaders who go to California to establish a ranch. The family patriarch, Joseph Wayne, develops a profound love for the land, and he eventually associates a great oak tree on his ranch with the spirit of his dead father. After the oak tree is destroyed, the land begins to sour.

Although more rigid, in terms of dialog and narrative voice, than Steinbeck's later prose, the novel nonetheless utilizes its mythological material to beautifully depict man's relationship to the land. ( )
  jsnrcrny | May 29, 2008 |
Steinbeck wrote a number of California novels. The early ones feature lyrical descriptive prose of the land, whether of the Salinas Valley or the Pacific Coast. Clearly Steinbeck loved the area, had a real passion for the valleys, the vegetation, the animals—and the people who lived there. But while almost all of his other California novels that focused on the land and the people who lived on it were gently affectionate, To A God Unknown is a very different bird. The title is taken from an adaptation of a hymn to the god Prajapati from the Hindu Rig-Veda. And while the hymn is innocuous enough, it really is a foreshadowing of what is to come.

Steinbeck used his initial chapters and prefaces to set the emotional mood of his works. In To A God Unknown, practically from the first chapter, the mood is one of a foreboding, as Joseph Wayne takes leave of his father who blesses him in a vaguely described but clearly unusual way, deliberately meant, I’m sure, to evoke Hebrew Testament patriarchs. From there on, the mood just intensifies, as Wayne finds land that is his—so much so that there is a passage that can easily be interpreted as his copulation with the earth.

From old-timers, Indian/Hispanic residents of the valley, Joseph learns of years when there was a terrible drought—when the land died and the cattle died and the people left. But Wayne is convinced that it will never happen again to his land. There is an old oak on the land, underneath which Wayne builds his house. One day, he feels a presence in the oak, and is convinced that somehow his father is there. He receives a letter from his brothers telling of the passing of the old man and how at the end there was nothing more the father wanted than to see John’s new land. The brothers, two of whom are married, come out to join Joseph in California, buy adjacent land, and jointly farm. One brother, Burton, is a fundamentalist Christian, and in his religious fanaticism lie the seeds of the outcome of this story.

The years pass—Joseph takes a wife, Elizabeth—the farms prosper—but still there is no relief from the absolute certainty that disaster is ahead, that some appalling calamity awaits. Partially, Steinbeck achieves this in his dialogue, which seems perfectly natural to the characters but is “off”—somehow not right, strange.

The tension becomes practically unbearable; the catastrophe strikes. And the resolution is both inevitable, satisfying, and unsettling at the same time.

I did not find To A God Unknown an easy read—on the contrary, I had to put it down for a while because I just could not bear what I knew was coming. This is one of Steinbeck’s most powerful and disturbing works, and will throw off those who are used to his more affectionate books such as Tortilla Flat. Yet it is an outstanding example of how mood can be determined and sustained by great writing. ( )
  Joycepa | Mar 6, 2008 |
To a God Unknown is a book full of powerful images. Reading about the mossy stone in its lonely pine grove still makes me shudder, and I am not a superstitious or particularly spiritual person. To the protagonist Joseph, the land is god and god is everything, and it exacts great and terrible payments for the fertility and life that Joseph craves. Like almost of all of Steinbeck’s novels, it is beautifully written and full of vividly drawn people. However in other ways it is very unlike most of his novels. It isn’t funny, not even a little, and it isn’t quite about people. I can’t quite describe what it is about (the interconnectedness of all life? human longing for kinship with nature? fate?), or adequately explain the feelings it evokes in me. ( )
1 vote jlelliott | Aug 31, 2007 |
This is not one of Steinbeck's better-known works, but it is a fine one, about a quartet of brothers who relocate in a fertile valley in California around the turn of the century (19th or 20th is not absolutely certain), to make their living from the land. Joseph, the leader, takes a wife and over time develops a strong and mystic fixation about the land he cares for. For a time the land is fertile and life is good, but then the land betrays him, with consequences tragic for himself and disastrous to his farm. By the end he is desperately looking for a way to restore the life to his land (the worst drought in decades has struck), and he hits upon a classically mystical way to do so. The book is involving and well-written, but everybody speaks in such heavy symbology that it sometimes becomes distracting. And I found it odd that a man who had such a strong relationship with his own father, and was so heavily invested in the land, could so almost casually give up his baby son to his brother's wife. Still, a powerful book. ( )
  burnit99 | Feb 22, 2007 |
Wikipedia: To a God Unknown is a novel by John Steinbeck, first published in 1933. The book was Steinbeck's second (after his unsuccessful Cup of Gold), the title taken from a hymn excerpt of the Rig Veda's Book X. Steinbeck found To a God Unknown extremely difficult to write; taking him roughly five years to complete, the novella proved more time-consuming than either East of Eden or The Grapes of Wrath, Steinbeck's longest novels.
In this short novel, Steinbeck explores the relationship of man to his land. The plot follows a man, Joseph Wayne, who moves to California in order to establish a homestead, leaving his father, who soon dies.
Plot summary:
After receiving a blessing from his dying father, Joseph moves to California and settles in a valley near a town called Nuestra Señora. Several days later, he receives a letter from one of his brothers that their father had died, and in that moment Joseph feels that his father's soul enters the large oak tree by his homesite.
The three Wayne brothers subsequently move out to the valley with their wives, and purchase the adjacent land. One day, the brothers come across a pine forest, and in the center is a quiet, circular glade with a stream flowing out of the large rock. Juanito, a ranch-hand, tells them that it is a sacred place to the indios.
Joseph then marries a school-teacher from Monterrey named Elizabeth, but upon returning to the farm from the wedding, they find that the youngest brother, Benjy, got drunk and was stabbed accidentally by Juanito. Joseph then meets Juanito by the rock, and does not kill Juanito despite his request. Juanito then leaves the farm.
For a time, the farm prospers, and Elizabeth bears a child. Burton, a devout Christian, becomes increasingly concerned with Joseph's late night 'talks' with the tree. The farm is then the site of a New Year's fiesta, and Burton decides to leave the farm after seeing the 'pagan' activities. After he leaves, the remaining brothers find that Burton killed the tree. Slowly, everything begins to die as the dry years return.
One day, Joseph and Elizabeth visit the glade. Elizabeth decides to climb on the mossy side, when she falls and dies. Soon thereafter, Joseph and Thomas decide to drive the cattle out to San Joaquin to find green pastures. At the last minute, Joseph decides to stay, then lives by the rock and watches the stream dry up. Juanito returns and convinces Joseph to visit the town's priest, which he does. He returns to the rock to find the stream dry. When running towards his horse, he frightens the animal and receives a cut on the arm. Joseph then climbs to the top of the rock and slits his wrists. He feels the rain falling down, and realizes that he is the rain.
  billyfantles | Sep 29, 2006 |
A must read! Best novel, American or otherwise which exists describing the inner spirituality and turmpil of the human soul. ( )
  mrkay | Aug 25, 2006 |
Steinbeck's mystical tale of two brothers,their beliefs, a huge oak, and how their choices affect each others lives. Classic Steinbeck. ( )
  JBreedlove | Aug 18, 2006 |
Set somewhere in Monterey County, very spiritual, though pagan; intriguing. ( )
  beata | Feb 24, 2006 |
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