John Steinbeck's dog ate the first draft of "Of Mice and Men." |
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And then, a "minor tragedy stalked," Steinbeck wrote in a letter to his literary agent on May 27, 1936. "My setter pup [Toby], left alone one night, made confetti of about half of my ms. [manuscript] book. Two months work to do over again. ... There was no other draft." Yet whatever anguish the author initially felt over seeing his months of hard work reduced to shreds had clearly tempered by the time he sat down to write the letter. "I was pretty mad but the poor little fellow may have been acting critically," Steinbeck continued. "I didn't want to ruin a good dog for a ms. I'm not sure is good at all. He only got an ordinary spanking with his punishment flyswatter. But there's the work to do over from the start." | |
Fortunately, Toby's drastic edits proved but a temporary obstacle in the gestating story's path to completion. Inspired by his new surroundings, which included a study crafted to his liking, Steinbeck restarted his tale of codependent migrant workers George and Lennie and furiously plowed through revisions until submitting what became Of Mice and Men to his editors in August. And while Steinbeck initially had modest hopes for his completed novella, Of Mice and Men became another critical and commercial hit upon publication in February 1937, ensuring that its now-famous author, his wife, and especially Toby could enjoy nothing but the finest dining options in the days to come. | |
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Another of Steinbeck's dogs featured prominently in one of the author's last books. | |||||||||
Nearly a quarter-century after Toby made a mess of the Of Mice and Men manuscript, Steinbeck took his French poodle, Charley, for a three-month tour of the U.S. in a pickup truck fitted with a camper top. Ostensibly there to provide companionship for long, anonymous stretches of highway, the poodle instead became a prominent figure in Steinbeck's 1962 travelogue Travels With Charley: In Search of America. Avoiding the urge to feast on his owner's letters that formed the basis of the book, Charley lived up to his end of the bargain both as a sidekick and instigator of events, including his bouts with prostatitis that prompted the need to seek out veterinary care. While Travels With Charley later invited controversy for Steinbeck's alleged fudging of many details, the titular canine's ever-steady presence throughout its pages helped give its ailing and aging author one final bestselling book. | |||||||||
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