Ratings31
Average rating3.5
"Dust piles up like snow across the prairie. . . ."
A terrible accident has transformed Billie Jo's life, scarring her inside and out. Her mother is gone. Her father can't talk about it. And the one thing that might make her feel better -- playing the piano -- is impossible with her wounded hands.
To make matters worse, dust storms are devastating the family farm and all the farms nearby. While others flee from the dust bowl, Billie Jo is left to find peace in the bleak landscape of Oklahoma -- and in the surprising landscape of her own heart.
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Billie Jo loves to play the piano, and she's good at it, too. Performing in town helps her to earn some money that her mother saves to send her to college one day, even though times are hard in dustbowl Oklahoma during the Great Depression. But then tragedy hits when an accident takes Billie Joe's mother, stillborn baby brother, and hideously burns her hands. She must then learn to live with the dust and her silent father in a land without any hope. I expected to connect with this novel much more than I actually did. It wasn't the free verse form–that allowed for several beautiful images, such as her mother pregnant in the rain–but rather a lack of emotion from Billie Jo herself, despite the horrific living conditions she endures. Recommended for upper middle grade to high school as one way to illustrate the horrors of the dustbowl.
Billie Jo and her parents are struggling to survive. There is no money. The farm has had no rain. Worst of all, storms are blowing across the land, raining dust on everything.
And then, in the midst of all the suffering, comes tragedy: Billie Jo's mother and tiny baby brother die in a horrible accident. A difficult life becomes impossible.
A grim, bleak novel, yes, but a novel that has stayed with me since I first read it ten years ago, a novel that is just as good the second time as it was the first.