Son of The Grapes of Wrath author John Steinbeck, Thomas Steinbeck, has just released a new novella Cabbages and Kings for Barnes and Noble's Nook. Thomas was kind enough to write a introductory note for our publication of Steinbeck: Citizen Spy and we can't wait to read his new work.
Cabbages and Kings follows Titus Gatelock.  He's well known to just about everybody around King City 
who possessed a horse, a mule, or any close approximation with “four 
legs and a whiny”; though this commonly used phrase would be highly 
misleading in the case of Mr. Gatelock. Titus was acknowledged 
principally as an exceptional craftsman in all manner of fine equestrian
 leatherwork and a harness maker without peer in that part of 
California. But people knew him in that context alone. In all other 
respects, Titus Gatelock’s life, past and present, was an absolute 
mystery, and not just of the quaint and curious variety, but an enigma 
that became so tantalizing over the years, that it begged every kind of 
speculation by every category of citizen. And if the truth were told, 
old Titus made a point of doing nothing whatsoever to alleviate this 
confusion. In fact, his oblique and sometimes clipped responses to 
public curiosity only heightened the mystery, in some cases to the point
 of public irritation. He did this by never affirming or denying 
anything people said about him, no matter how unlikely or absurd.
It all started to get out of hand when, at the point of frustration, a 
fellow tradesman tried to get a rise out of Titus by saying that he’d 
overheard that Titus had once been a dangerous bandit who rode with the 
notorious Jose Baraga when the Sacramento gold train was robbed back in 
1891. Titus just looked up, smiled, and said that he had heard that 
particular story as well. When the meddler looked surprised and asked 
whether the story was true or not, Titus just shook his head and said 
that the truth was hard to pin down after all these years. He said that 
it seemed to him as though people just made up their truths as they went
 along. He closed down further discussion with, “There’s real history 
and real truth out there everywhere, but when it bumps heads with a 
whopping good yarn that everybody enjoys, then the truth is sure to 
cross the line in last place every time.”
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