Criticism > Short Story Criticism > The Chrysanthemums, John Steinbeck - Louis Owens (essay date 1985)
The Chrysanthemums, John Steinbeck - Louis Owens (essay date 1985)
Louis Owens (essay date 1985)
SOURCE: “‘The Chrysanthemums’: Waiting for Rain,” in John Steinbeck's Re-vision of America, The University of Georgia Press, 1985, pp. 108–13.
[In the following essay, Owens correlates Elisa Allen's desire for rain with her need for personal fulfillment.]
Of the first story in The Long Valley, “The Chrysanthemums,” Steinbeck wrote: “It is entirely different and is designed to strike without the reader's knowledge. I mean he reads it casually and after it is finished feels that something profound has happened to him although he does not know what nor how” (Life in Letters, p. 91). In light of the eagerness with which critics have rushed to praise this story, calling it “Steinbeck's most artistically successful story,” and “one of the world's great short stories,”1 it seems that most critics would agree that “something profound” happens in “The...
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Criticism
- Joseph Warren Beach (essay date 1941)
- Kenneth Payson Kempton (essay date 1953)
- Mordecai Marcus (essay date 1965)
- Elizabeth E. McMahan (essay date 1968–69)
- Charles A. Sweet, Jr. (essay date 1974)
- Roy S. Simmonds (essay date 1974)
- Stanley Renner (essay date 1985)
- Louis Owens (essay date 1985)
- John Ditsky (essay date 1986)
- C. Kenneth Pellow (essay date 1989)
- R. S. Hughes (essay date 1989)
- John H. Timmerman (essay date 1990)
- Susan Shillinglaw (essay date 1991)
- Christopher S. Busch (essay date 1993)
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