First edition |
Farm work was more mechanized, and gas-powered tractors had taken the place of horses. Improved roads and automobiles had shortened distances. But farm work was still hard, often grueling labor at the mercy of the elements. There was dust, manure, and mud, and whether bumper years or drought and crop failures, farm life was isolated and lonely.
Realism. Garland’s realistic portrayal of it—the
beauty as well as the ugliness—collided with two different streams of thought
about rural America in the early 20th century. One was a pastoral,
bucolic, and picturesque vision of simple, wholesome living far from the
corruptive influence of the city. Another was the go-west boosterism that
coaxed settlers from the East and abroad to snap up free land and get rich as
agricultural producers. Garland saw in his own family’s example the empty
promise at the heart of both visions.
The Garland family |
The lure of the West, as Garland came to
see it, was even more devastating in its effect. His pioneering father moved west
a total of five times, with time off to serve as a Union soldier during the Civil
War. As a boy, Garland went with his family from their farm near La Crosse, Wisconsin, to a homestead community near Osage, in northeast Iowa. At the age
of 10 he was plowing virgin sod there with horses.
The next move was to the James River Valley near Aberdeen in Dakota, where his father eventually acquired 1000 acres of prairie, converted to wheat. But after 2 – 3 years of crop failure he was ready to move once again, this time to Montana, where there was irrigation for farming. By now able to supplement his father’s income, and seeing his mother’s failing health, Garland persuaded his parents to return to Wisconsin, where they could spend their last years with the friends and family who never left.
Farewell gathering |
In Dakota, Garland observes that “nearly
all, even the young men, looked worn and weather-beaten and some appeared both
silent and sad.” He sees “the tragic futility of their existence,” their lives
“dull and eventless.” Influenced by the social-economic theory of Henry George,
he blames the system of land ownership, which has pushed settlers from the East
and Europe/Russia onto western lands, where with “unremitting toil” they labor
to feed and clothe families while remaining impoverished and fugitive.
Seminary graduation |
Interesting for book lovers is Garland’s
recollection of his McGuffey Readers
and how he supplemented his formal education with other reading material: 100
(by his count) dime novels, Hawthorne, Scott, Cooper, Paradise Lost, Twain’s Roughing
It, western poet Joaquin Miller, The
Life of P.T. Barnum, Franklin’s Autobiography,
and Edward Eggleston’s Hoosier Schoolmaster,
“a milestone in my literary progress,” he notes, “as it is in the development
of distinctive western fiction.” Plus magazines and weekly newspapers: Hearth and Home, New York Saturday Night, New York Ledger, and New York Weekly.
Yet another thread of the book is Garland’s
struggle as a starving writer and lecturer in Boston where he ekes out a
living, while befriending the likes of novelist and editor William Dean Howells
and eventually wins the praise of Walt Whitman. He is also deeply affected by the
performances of Shakespearean actor Edwin Booth, who taught “the dignity, the power and the
music of the English tongue.”
Hamlin Garland, 1893, age 33 |
Mostly I want to recommend this 467-page book as an
excellent reference for any writer placing a story on the prairie frontier
during the decades following the Civil War. It’s a valuable lesson in social
history as it captures a period of rapid national transition, with a realism
that is a corrective to the somewhat different view of Little
House on the Prairie.
A Son of the Middle Border is currently
available online at google books and Internet Archive and in print and ebook formats
at amazon, Barnes&Noble, and AbeBooks. For more of Friday’s Forgotten
Books, click on over to Patti Abbott’s blog.
Further reading:
Image credits:
Illustrations from the novel, Maynard Dixon
Author's photo, Wikimedia Commons
First edition cover, people.uncw.edu
Coming up: Craig Johnson, Death Without Company
Illustrations from the novel, Maynard Dixon
Author's photo, Wikimedia Commons
First edition cover, people.uncw.edu
Coming up: Craig Johnson, Death Without Company
This is a beautiful evaluation of a book I now know I must read.
ReplyDeleteI'm currently working on some memoir stuff myself. I need to read a few others to see how folks do it.
ReplyDeleteI've been aware of Garland since childhood mostly for his machismic poetry, "Do You Fear the Force of the Wind?" and the like, but this sounds vastly more interesting (quite aside from inspiring the musicale post as well!).
ReplyDeleteHave always intended to read it. After your fine review, I will make it a must.
ReplyDeleteRon, the depth of your review reflects the intensity of this historical novel set on the frontier. It's good to know that this and many of his others books are available legally online.
ReplyDelete