http://www.kqed.org/.stream/anon/radio/tcrmag/2014/04/2014-04-11g-tcrmag.mp3
John Steinbeck’s "The Grapes of Wrath" turns 75 on Monday. The book recounts the trials of the Joad family, who lost their Oklahoma farm and traveled to California at the height of the Depression. It was banned and burned in some cities when it was first published in 1939. But it also won a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award, selling nearly half a million copies within a year.
In Steinbeck’s hometown of Salinas, tour guide Nancy Montana guides visitors through the author’s boyhood home. “John’s grandparents lived in this house, and John was born in this room,” she says, standing in a wallpapered parlor. In the 1970s, she explains, the two-story Victorian only narrowly avoided becoming a parking lot. Today, it has been restored as a volunteer-run restaurant with a menu that features dishes Steinbeck’s mother might have served 100 years ago.
“Beef stroganoff, chicken piccata, chicken spinach crepes,” Montana says, flipping through a cookbook. “She did a lot with chicken.”
Over the years, the Steinbeck House Restaurant has collected furniture, keepsakes and photographs from the author’s family and friends. In the old guest room, a glass case holds Steinbeck’s high school ring and early printings of his books.

Montana peers through the glass at items on the top shelf. “We have a set of their tableware. John Steinbeck’s whiskey, don’t ask me how we got that. 1947! You’d think he’d drink it.”