Comparing The Tortilla Curtain And The Grapes Of Wrath

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T.C. Boyle’s The Tortilla Curtain and John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath have more in common than titles mentioning food. Some readers could argue that the two novels tell the same story. Of course the characters, setting, and plot are slightly different but the themes remain the same. The two authors expose, through brutal realism, the corrupt conception of the American dream, of being in control of one’s own destiny. What the authors uncover as the culprit of this corruption is capitalism. The Tortilla Curtain and The Grapes of Wrath both demonstrate how a capitalist economic system destroys working class families like the Rincons and the Joads. In The Tortilla Curtain the Rincon family is a couple from Mexico that traveled to the United States of America. They were in search of a “better life,” of the American dream, where they could have a house, a car, …show more content…

Boyle’s final solution to the novel is an act of pure selflessness and compassion for another human. Candido reaches his hand out to save Delaney from drowning in the flood. Candido, who has lost his wife and child to the flood, tried to save the man who had been trying to kill him. This action is Boyle conveying his theme: people must have a sense of mankind, of humans versus hatred, of people versus prejudice. Similarly, The Grapes of Wrath ends in an act of pure selflessness. When the flood begins, the Joads search for higher ground and find an old barn. Inside, a boy and his hungry, dying father hide from the rain. Rose of Sharon, recently giving birth to a stillborn baby, takes it upon herself to try to nurse the man back to health. Rose of Sharon was the most self centered character in the novel but when she had the means to save another person’s life she didn’t hesitate. Steinbeck wanted readers to realize that the best way for humans to survive is

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