Thomas Steinbeck on His Father's Typewriter

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The Blackwing 24 pays tribute to Pulitzer Prize winning author John Steinbeck. Designed under the guidance of his son, accomplished author Thomas Steinbeck, we’ve attempted to create what would have been John Steinbeck’s ideal pencil.
John Steinbeck was known for writing his novels out by hand. Later in his career, however, he was forced to introduce a typewriter into his daily routine. John’s son Thom shared what brought about this change, and how his father coped with his new writing companion.
VIDEO TRANSCRIPT:
The saddest thing was… to my father, as a writer… is the woman who had been doing his line editing, the woman who could actually read his handwriting, finally died.
At Viking, she was at Viking Press. And nobody else could read his handwriting.
And they sent him a letter saying, “John, we’re so sorry, we know you like to write by hand but, we can’t publish your handwriting. We can’t read it. You either have to find somebody who can type it up for you, or you’re going to have to get a typewriter.”
Well, this was a big drama in our house. Big drama. And he went out and he bought himself one of those gigantic IBMs. You know the kind that when you typed on it, all the paintings in the room moved.
Tunk, tunk, tunk, tunk, tunk. It was an unbelievable sound.
He was a six finger typist. Tick, tick. Tick, tick, tick. And it was too slow, it would drive him crazy.
What he would do is, write by hand, finish his writing for the day and then he would have to spend the afternoon typing up what he’d hand-written. Because he knew what it said.
So he went out and bought balls in every language. Remember they had the ball? And he got balls in Finnish, and balls in Russian. Just to see what they looked like, you know?
And just to get it back on his publishers, he one day wrote… sent them… three pages in Russian. Now he couldn’t speak or read Russian, he just used the Russian ball and made all these letters in Russian.
Tick, tick, tick, tick, tick, tick.
And shipped it off and said “How’s this?”
And they said, “You’re kidding.”

Пікірлер: 7

  • @hankmoody5514
    @hankmoody55144 жыл бұрын

    Writing by hand is the best

  • @JHParee
    @JHParee3 жыл бұрын

    I wish they could bring back the 24s just for a limited time only. I only just got subscribed to the Volumes.

  • @akzz2008
    @akzz20088 жыл бұрын

    ! love you Steinbeck. from Suadi

  • @blankblank7101
    @blankblank71012 жыл бұрын

    1:17 Is it just me or did he write the same word a hundred times?

  • @grumpy3543
    @grumpy35436 ай бұрын

    Why didn’t he just read his own handwriting to a typist? Back then every secretary could take dictation.

  • @nuabruno
    @nuabruno4 жыл бұрын

    bona story

  • @Cedarsedge
    @Cedarsedge10 ай бұрын

    Thom was always a great bullshitter

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