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The Great Depression of the 1930s came though hometowns like a
tornado on the tail of a prairie fire, knocking down everything in
its way. The stock market crash in 1929 began it all. At first one
didn't notice much difference, but each day a piece of living
crumbled and fell off. Like a conquering monster it wiped out
mortgages, savings accounts, repossessed automobiles, cancelled
insurance policies, closed doors on small businesses, and caused
banks to fail. Men were laid off; entire families were put on the
road. Yet, people refused to be defeated. They believed things
would get better and in the meantime tried to encourage their
children to make the most of every opportunity. In her inspiring
book, the author shows how the people of a small Oklahoma community
sorted the important from the unimportant - her family and the
townspeople learned to cope with the insecurity of the Depression.
This is no "dust bowl saga." It is an education in survival and
preservation.
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