Thomas Steinbeck | |
Birth Name: | Thomas Myles Steinbeck |
Birth Date: | 2 August 1944 |
Birth Place: | New York City, U.S. |
Death Place: | Santa Barbara, California, U.S. |
Occupation: | Screenwriter and novelist |
Education: | California Institute of the Arts |
Period: | 20th century |
Genre: | Fiction, screenplays |
Parents: | John Steinbeck (father) Gwyndolyn Conger (mother) |
Relatives: | John Steinbeck IV (brother) |
Thomas Myles Steinbeck (August 2, 1944 – August 11, 2016) was a screenwriter, photographer, and journalist. He published numerous works of fiction, including short stories and novels. He was the elder son of American novelist John Steinbeck.
Thomas ("Thom") Steinbeck was born in Manhattan,[1] New York City, to American novelist John Steinbeck and his second wife, singer-composer Gwyndolyn Conger on August 2, 1944.[2] His younger brother John Steinbeck IV was born two years later. His parents' marriage dissolved four years after he was born,[2] and subsequently Thom spent a great deal of time with his father, whom he credited for instilling in him not only a passion for the world's great writers, but also a recognition of how language and poetic rhythms affect individuals and society in general.[3] He had a good relationship with his famous father, saying that he would rate him "an eight-and-a-half or a nine" on a ten-point scale.[4]
Thom was educated at a number of East Coast boarding schools.[2] As he told an interviewer in 2011:
When not in school or on holiday, Thom and his brother traveled widely with their father to Europe, Greece, and North Africa.[2] In 1961, the family spent a year traveling the world with a young teacher named Terrence McNally, whom the elder Steinbeck hired as a tutor for his sons.[5] McNally later gained acclaim as a playwright and won four Tony Awards and an Emmy.
After high school, Thom Steinbeck studied animation at the California Institute of the Arts, then went on to study film at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television.[2] The Vietnam War cut his studies short.[3]
Steinbeck trained to serve with Armed Forces Radio and Television at Fort Knox, but arrived in Vietnam on the second day of the 1968 Tet Offensive and was immediately reassigned as a helicopter door gunner.[2] Afterward, he resumed work as a combat photographer (he once said that "we had a fantasy that somehow we could take the photograph that could stop the war")[6] and returned to his original posting with AFVN as a television production specialist. After his service, he returned to Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia as a journalist and photographer.[3] [4]
Upon his return to the U.S., Steinbeck wrote and crewed on a number of documentaries, films and television projects. During the next 25 years, he wrote his own original screenplays and documentaries and screenplay adaptations of his father's work.[7] The latter included screenplays based on In Dubious Battle, The Pearl, and Travels With Charley.[2]
At age 58, Steinbeck published his first book, Down to a Soundless Sea (2002), a series of short stories based upon the original settlers of Big Sur, California, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[2] The book was translated into seven languages, an audio version, and a large print edition, and was part of Oprah's Book Club. In 2010, Simon & Schuster published his first novel, In the Shadow of the Cypress. His second novel, The Silver Lotus, was released in November 2011 by Counterpoint Press.[3]
Steinbeck contributed to the My California Project, a collection of short stories by 27 California authors. Sales from the book were used to help save the struggling California Arts Council.[7] This book went into three printings, and the project helped the Council reach financial solvency.[3]
In addition to writing and producing, Steinbeck was an active public speaker and teacher, who often lectured on American literature, creative writing, and the communication arts.[7] He served as a board member of both the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas, California and The Center for Steinbeck Studies at San Jose State University.[7] Once every year, he personally presented the John Steinbeck Award through his foundation, The John Steinbeck Family Foundation in affiliation with The Center for Steinbeck Studies.[8]
Steinbeck was an advocate for authors' rights. In 2009, he and his friend folk singer Arlo Guthrie brought a copyright infringement lawsuit against Google that was eventually settled.[2] [7]
At the time of his death, Steinbeck lived with his wife Gail in Santa Barbara, California. According to his family, he died of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, nine days after his 72nd birthday.[2]
Fiction
Contributor