Mineral Springs Road 1940s (MEMORY IS MY NAME)
Book Details
Author(s)M Spears
PublisherIrish and Southern Art LLC
ISBN / ASINB00VGKIQ2M
ISBN-13978B00VGKIQ26
MarketplaceCanada 🇨🇦
Description
The United States, once upon a time not long ago, was filled with family farms. You could walk along a country road and pass family after family. They'd maybe be working in the fields or around in the yard. They might be lounging on the porch drinking sweet cold tea. No big operations on houseless land, no amalgamations, no paved roads, no total efficiency, just home. They'd wave, and you'd wave.
Growing fills a child’s day all the way up. Years later we might -- or might not -- remember what was happening in the big world. Like the Great Depression, which (for some) was gone. And World War II, fought by Americans (mostly farm boys) far from home.
In the 1940s, a child was growing up hungry to learn. She already knew that mules, herd dogs, and turkey gobblers don't like children but nanny goats and little dogs do, that bare feet are best, and that money is 'way less important than freedom and good grownups.
Soon as she could read and print, she filled a dime-store diary every year. Each had a tiny clasp and key.
At the end of summer 1949 she unlocked her diaries and found them tricky to read but full of true-to-life telling about animals, clashes, bravery, tangles, crops, shadows, lightning bugs and lightning. She spent 4 months translating their jumble into 20-some notebooks. Being in school by now and seeing differences, she added fierce defenses of feed-sack playclothes, outdoor toilets, and country ways.
Being so young, the child couldn't grasp these further challenges of the 1940s:
Farms are where the Great Depression hit first and gripped longest.
Family farms depend on people who belong on the land, who brave its uncertainties. Those people are not considered good credit risks. Others without a clue how valuable farm life can be might get title. This means the ones with the most to lose often lose.
Far more Americans went to war from farms than cities. Many came home eager to take up the lives they laid down. But post-war farmland could be bought up cheap by outsiders.
On this confusing new battleground, who is the enemy?
The Depression and the Duration combined to teach a dangerous double lesson:
Take life day by day. Don't look too far forward.
MINERAL SPRINGS ROAD 1940s is a little girl’s notebooks, put together and expanded from memory. Its characters are tame, half-tame, and wild. At age not-quite-10, she's only half-tame herself, and too busy growing to realize how much she knows.
Some chapters in her book:
Reddish-Goldilocks
Walking-Distance People
How We Got Toby
Pee Dee Country
Nanny and the Soft Top
Cap's Luck
How Not To Ride a Mule
Day of the Mad Fox
The Army Air Base, the WAC, and Lassie
Darlington Auction Market
The Mint-Green House
Storm, Lightning, Fire and Rain
The Smell of Singed Fur
The Mineral Spring
Red Leather Pony
And the last -- 28 December 1949
MINERAL SPRINGS ROAD 1940s is first in M B Spears' planned series MEMORY IS MY NAME.
Growing fills a child’s day all the way up. Years later we might -- or might not -- remember what was happening in the big world. Like the Great Depression, which (for some) was gone. And World War II, fought by Americans (mostly farm boys) far from home.
In the 1940s, a child was growing up hungry to learn. She already knew that mules, herd dogs, and turkey gobblers don't like children but nanny goats and little dogs do, that bare feet are best, and that money is 'way less important than freedom and good grownups.
Soon as she could read and print, she filled a dime-store diary every year. Each had a tiny clasp and key.
At the end of summer 1949 she unlocked her diaries and found them tricky to read but full of true-to-life telling about animals, clashes, bravery, tangles, crops, shadows, lightning bugs and lightning. She spent 4 months translating their jumble into 20-some notebooks. Being in school by now and seeing differences, she added fierce defenses of feed-sack playclothes, outdoor toilets, and country ways.
Being so young, the child couldn't grasp these further challenges of the 1940s:
Farms are where the Great Depression hit first and gripped longest.
Family farms depend on people who belong on the land, who brave its uncertainties. Those people are not considered good credit risks. Others without a clue how valuable farm life can be might get title. This means the ones with the most to lose often lose.
Far more Americans went to war from farms than cities. Many came home eager to take up the lives they laid down. But post-war farmland could be bought up cheap by outsiders.
On this confusing new battleground, who is the enemy?
The Depression and the Duration combined to teach a dangerous double lesson:
Take life day by day. Don't look too far forward.
MINERAL SPRINGS ROAD 1940s is a little girl’s notebooks, put together and expanded from memory. Its characters are tame, half-tame, and wild. At age not-quite-10, she's only half-tame herself, and too busy growing to realize how much she knows.
Some chapters in her book:
Reddish-Goldilocks
Walking-Distance People
How We Got Toby
Pee Dee Country
Nanny and the Soft Top
Cap's Luck
How Not To Ride a Mule
Day of the Mad Fox
The Army Air Base, the WAC, and Lassie
Darlington Auction Market
The Mint-Green House
Storm, Lightning, Fire and Rain
The Smell of Singed Fur
The Mineral Spring
Red Leather Pony
And the last -- 28 December 1949
MINERAL SPRINGS ROAD 1940s is first in M B Spears' planned series MEMORY IS MY NAME.
