
Time's Shadow
Bauer’s was typical of true family farms, where wives supplemented family income by selling butter and eggs and children provided unpaid labour. These hardworking farmers were not particularly heroic or virtuous. They had their debts and doubts; but at the same time their struggles for a kind of moral economy offer valuable lessons that merit our attention today.
Among Bauer’s vivid recollections: driving a team of huge, clomping work horses; his father’s daybreak call to long days in the field at age 12; and surviving eight years of education in a one-room schoolhouse (with one teacher determined to have all her students learn the harmonica). He shares the trials of Depression and drought, experiences the coming of electricity - which prompted his father to take on a sideline as an electrician - and reveals the vital importance of the local blacksmith. Throughout the book, he finds wonder in the commonplace, like going to town on a Saturday night for a black walnut ice cream cone.
Here is a childhood that few in the United States will ever know. More than that, it is a key to understanding the tragedy that befell the smaller family farms on the Great Plains as sweeping changes after the mid-1950s - falling grain and livestock prices, adverse terms of trade for agricultural products - turned out to be more devastating than tornados or dust storms.
Gracefully written with a keen eye for the telling detail, Time’s Shadow eloquently captures the events of an era and the meaning it held for one boy and those around him. It is a refreshingly unsentimental “Little House on the Prairie” that will resonate not only with older compatriots but with anyone whose curiosity leads them to wonder about a world we have lost.
- Undertitel
- Remembering a Family Farm in Kansas
- Författare
- Arnold J. Bauer
- ISBN
- 9780700619702
- Språk
- Engelska
- Vikt
- 369 gram
- Utgivningsdatum
- 2.5.2014
- Sidor
- 156