by Robert J Hastings
Southern Illinois University Press, 1986
Paper: 978-0-8093-1304-4 | eISBN: 978-0-8093-8375-7
Library of Congress Classification F549.M34H374 1986
Dewey Decimal Classification 977.3993

ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
ABOUT THIS BOOK



Hastings experienced the rural and small town side of an event that touched all who weathered it—the economic crash of 1929 and its 10-year aftermath.


The author grew up in Marion, Illinois, entering the first grade in 1930, the start of the Great Depression. This book, which recalls memorable epi­sodes in the life of that boy, is a sequel to the pop­ular ANickel’s Worth of Skim Milk.


What Hastings experienced as a child was typical of depression-era life. Those who were young then can relive lost youth in Hastings’ books. And there were moments worth reliving: Hastings tells of “laughter and love and tears in the midst of hunger and cold and deprivation.” Those too young to have experienced the economic devastation can see those hard days through the eyes of a trained storyteller reporting from the point of view of a child.





See other books on: 1918-1945 | 1929 | Childhood and youth | Depressions | Personal narratives
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