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| The Pearl (Penguin Modern Classics) | 
enlarge | Author: John Steinbeck Creators: Jose-luis Orozco, Linda Wagner-martin Publisher: Penguin Classics Category: Book
List Price: £8.99 Buy Used: £2.50 You Save: £6.49 (72%)
New (29) from £2.70
Avg. Customer Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 135503
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 128 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 4.9 x 0.9
ISBN: 0141185120 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780141185125 ASIN: 0141185120
Publication Date: September 7, 2000 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Immediate dispatch-Cover picture differs-2000 edition--very good reading copy
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 6-9 of 9 | | « PREV | | |
An American classic. September 28, 2005 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a simple, but extremely readable short story. A tale of tragedy afflicting a family that thought they had found happiness, only to realize a great misfortune. This book is deservedly considered an American classic.
the pearl that bored the world May 15, 2003 3 out of 15 found this review helpful
the pearl was very dull. john steinbeck is usualy a very good writer. the plot of this book, however was a little thin. i also think he could have tryed alittle harder. he seemed to be as bored with writing it as i was reading it. He wasn't very specific, and not much took place to begin with. I didn't like it but if your one who likes a tear jerker with no comedy, or even really any adventure, you will like it. over all the book has a good moral, and makes a great short story, but doesn't have what it takes to be a novel.
Finding the Real Treasure October 27, 2002 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
Most people born and raised in developed first world countries cannot even imagine the depths of poverty that most of the rest of the world are forced to live with. This story illuminates this fact, as we enter the world of Kino, a pearl diver and occasional fisherman, his wife Juana, and their baby son, Coyotito. All they have is a grass shack house, a few clay cooking utensils, and their prize possession, Kino's boat, inherited from his father and grandfather. The boat is the family's livelihood, providing the means to put a meal on the table and to provide a few pesos for store bought goods by selling the small pearls Kino is able to find.But Kino and his family, far from being depressed or unhappy, have a great treasure, the love they have for each other and their satisfaction with life as it is, with few disturbing dreams of greater things. But their quiet, routine life is turned upside down the day that Kino finds a Great Pearl. Suddenly Kino can dream of better things: a rifle for himself, school for his son so he will be able to read and tell what is really in the books, a real house. But dreams can be deadly things. Dreams lead to desire, and desire to greed, and greed to violence. What happens to Kino and family from this point on is not a pretty story. Now we see that underneath the quiet, idyllic seeming small town and its inhabitants lie the seeds of cheating, betrayal, collusion, fear, and murder. And we see the gradual loss of Kino's real treasures. By the end of the book, events have reached the level of real tragedy, and you, along with Kino, are liable to end up in a state of emotional exhaustion. Steinbeck's prose for this book matches his characters and situation very well, a very minimalist sentence structure and set of speech patterns. As a parable, the story has a strong moralistic point, but Steinbeck does not overdrive his thematic message, but lets his story speak for itself. One of Steinbeck's great strengths was his ability to capture on paper the characters he saw around him, and this book is a showcase for that talent. The characters of Kino and Juana are exquisitely drawn, real people you can relate to even though their lifestyles may be very far from your own. And because they are real people, it is very hard not to get drawn into their lives, where their dreams and their pains very readily become your own. This may not be Steinbeck's greatest book, as it is too short and with too limited a focus to compare to something like his Grapes of Wrath. But within its own territory, there are very few other pieces of literature that are even half as good.
A simple and beatiful story with much more behind it... December 13, 2000 13 out of 15 found this review helpful
This was one of the most amazing books I've read. At a first glimpse it looks a very simple, easy reading book. And it is very easy to read, but behind the story is a whole philosophy of life, an anti-materialistic, a though critic of the capitalist society, along with the love for the homeland which is always present in Steinbeck's books. This is also an excellent book to give to those people who don't usually read because they find it boring. I tried doing it and I was successful ;)The story is beatiful and simple. The philosophy is beautiful. What more can we for?
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