After spending two months reading one book, which at 780 pages wasn’t even my longest of the year, I was definitely in the mood for one I could rip through pretty quickly.
Enter my old friend, John Steinbeck. Yes, he has a few giant novels, but his bibliography also includes a whole set of shorter books. I picked up a new stack of them just before my local Barnes & Noble closed, and this time went with “Tortilla Flat.”
I like reading Steinbeck in the summer because the natural imagery in his writing just makes me think of warm winds blowing through the trees. Of course his stories take place in northern California, so the warmth is relative, but just go with it.
What I enjoy about the shorter books is that they feel like dropping in on a very small slice of whichever town he’s featuring. If the stories were doled in small parts in a local newspaper, I would follow along for years.
This book is about a guy named Danny, who is kind of a deadbeat until he inherits a pair of houses. He agrees to let a few of his friends live in one of them, until they kindly (accidentally) burn it down. The rest of the story follows him letting those guys live with him, along with several other friends who move in and create a host of drama.
After the fire, Danny’s friends approach him, and he unleashes an absolutely wonderful array of insults I hope to incorporate into my own life:
“‘Dogs of dogs,’ Danny called them, and ‘Thieves of decent folks’ other house,’ and ‘Spawn of cuttlefish.’ He named their mothers cows and fathers ancient sheep.'”
I mean, when someone calls you “spawn of cuttlefish” what kind of comeback can you possibly have? (This cuttlefish website has the f word in its url, but is amazing.)
Beyond insults, Steinbeck also includes a fantastic name for a dog. One of the characters is a simple guy who for a while sleeps in a chicken coop with his five dogs. Danny and friends eventually convince him to join them in the house as part of a scheme to get his extensive savings, and he moves in with Fluff, Rudolph, Enrique, Pajarito and Señor Alec Thompson in tow.
As someone who would readily name a cat Captain Awesome, I’m always a fan of non-standard pet names, particularly ones that involve some sort of rank or honorific. It’s not quite Sammy Davis, Junior, Junior, but I fully enjoyed every time Señor Alec Thompson got a mention.