59 pages • 1 hour read
A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Egan has an abundance of references to children suffering from the disastrous effects of the Dust Bowl throughout The Worst Hard Time. Children become victims of either cruel weather conditions, poverty, desperation, or their parents' emotional trauma. The son of the German Russian immigrant George Ehrlich, Georgie, dies as thick airborne sand blocks a car's view, and the car runs over Georgie. Both Hazel Lucas Shaw's baby, Ruth Nell, and the abandoned baby Shaw finds in a coffee-box across the street die of dust pneumonia.
Egan gives numerous accounts of abandoned and neglected children. In Don Hartwell's private diary, there is a case of a baby being abandoned: “In Chicago, a man offered to give his baby so he could keep his car and, of course, there is much righteous indignation. But at least he dares to be honest. I'll bet anything that thousands of others would do the same thing, if only they dared to and could” (275). Many parents are unable to supervise their children, so many children “ran the streets, dirty and hungry” (167). Egan gives a detailed account of how a destitute thirty-five-year-old widow is found wandering the streets of Dalhart, babbling incoherently. Her children are forced to be separated from their mother when the judge commits her to an insane asylum.
Egan continually uses the analogy of rape to refer to the way farmers over-plow the land in the Dust Bowl. There are several direct references to the rape analogy. The first one is found in the Introduction. Melt White makes a direct analogy of rape: “‘God didn't create this land around here to be plowed up, says White. He created it for Indians and buffalo. Folks raped this land. Raped it bad’” (9).The analogy continues to the end of the book, even as Egan reflects on the solutions of the Dust Bowl disasters: “People had been lured to one of the last open spaces left on the American map by extravagant claims of water and prosperity. Was it too late to simply call them back, to admit that the nesters had been duped and the land raped?” (187).Egan also indirectly refers to the rape analogy when he describes the land as being intentionally violated. One such reference describes the newly-plowed tracts as “a different land” because it was “stripped bare” (101).
Plus, gain access to 8,800+ more expert-written Study Guides.
Including features:
By Timothy Egan