In what qualifies around here as blockbuster news, it turns out literary master John Steinbeck wrote a werewolf novel. Rejected by publishers in 1930, it’s currently under lock and key at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas in Austin. The Steinbeck estate has so far declined to authorize its release. Titled Murder at Full Moon, it’s reportedly a 233-page typescript, and as a bonus contains a couple of illustrations drawn by Steinbeck.
We’d love to read it. We’d enjoy comparing it to Guy Endore’s werewolf novel The Werewolf of Paris, which was published in 1933. But if we had to guess, we’d say the public will have wait a long while for Steinbeck’s moon tale to rise. What is there to gain when his reputation is pure platinum and his books—particularly The Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men, which are required reading for students the length and breadth of the U.S.—still sell? But you never know. The smell of money affects people like the smell of blood affects werewolves. Even when they’re already full they want another bite.