Reviews

Brudne lata trzydzieste. Opowieści o wielkich burzach pyłowych by Timothy Egan

suvata's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Everything you ever wanted to know about the great American Dust Bowl, and I mean everything. This was really an eye-opener for me. I just can’t imagine what those people went through. I don’t think that most people today are hardy enough to survive such an event.

kindlereads's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

It was pretty terrible to go through this. It makes me want to go and see these places to try and understand.

ckshaw13's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I don't really know what I disliked about this book. I'm usually s fan of historical books, but this one didn't cut it for me.

kutendo's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional informative reflective medium-paced

4.5

sarahcoller's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This was a very interesting and informative read---I learned a few things and definitely had a shift of perspective about this time in history. I'd been told that my great grandmother and her family went through the Dust Bowl but looking at the timeline compared to where they were doing those years, it looks like they were probably more financially affected by the lack of work than by the bulk of the dust storms themselves. Her family left Beaver County, Oklahoma (in the heart of the Dust Bowl) in the 1920s and went east to Enid (east of the worst of it by a couple hundred miles, according to this book). So they were out of there long before the dusters started hitting, but definitely would have felt the financial fall out of that mixed with the other effects of the Great Depression. From what I can tell, that family began to move west to Oregon in the early 1950s, with my great-grandmother arriving within 10 years of that.

Reading about the beginning of the depression reminded me of last summer when the government was buying truckloads of produce from farmers and distributing it free all over the country due to the effects of COVID. As much as I say I don't want to rely on the govt. for anything, it was sad and a little scary to read about what these people went through before the advent of govt. aid. I suppose I'm appreciative that the help is there for those who need it, but I also think it's heavily abused and should be more strictly regulated.

I was surprised that more mention wasn't made of the correlation between the "plagues" suffered during this time and the Exodus plagues. I imagine that was hot on most minds, being the Bible belt and all. I also learned that "No Man's Land" is a real place!

I was surprised by the naiveté of many who tried all kinds of strange things to induce rain. Scientific methods of the time included dynamiting the sky, plowing to create atmospheric disturbances, laying out dead snakes on fences, and trusting the steam from trains to make the skies weep. In addition to that, I think there was a bit of ignorance in Washington about how big of an area they were dealing with. One solution to the problem of blowing dust was to just asphalt the entire Great Plains, and Roosevelt had the brainy idea to plant a forest over the entire area to change the climate. Oy!

But speaking of naive... I was really interested and surprised to learn how big of an issue static electricity was during the storms. I didn't realize it built up with such strength as to make a couple of friends fall over shaking hands!

This was a super interesting read and really caused me to think about the things I freak out about nowadays. Nothing I've ever gone through compares to the things these brave (and maybe stubborn?) people went through.

sheritolley's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This book was not a page turner, but well worth the time. What these people went through? Oh my gosh! All I can say is it made me thankful. The wind might blow for ten days straight here in Twin Falls, but it's not dropping tons of dirt. People are not dying of dust peumonia, or living off of pickled tumbleweed. Our country might be going through a hard time right now, but what those people in the Dust Bowl suffered was horrible, and I hope it is never repeated.

lpip's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

So fascinating for the first few chapters, and then just repetitive for the next 200 pages. Kept thinking something new would happen, but it never did. Definitely sparked my interest in the dust bowl though!

ela_lee_'s review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

“100 million acres had lost most of its topsoil, nearly half had been essentially destroyed and could not be farmed again. Thinks about the size - an area stretching 500 miles north to south and 300 miles east to west was drifting and dusted. Two thirds of the total area of the Great Plains had been damaged by severe wind erosion...an environmental disaster bigger than anything in American history.”

3.5 stars rounded down to 3, mainly because I found the book pretty repetitive, a bit too long, and don’t feel like I learned much more information after the second half. However, I’m still glad to have read this book; I found it intensely interesting and descriptive of an area and time period that is often overlooked.

The Dust Bowl era has always intrigued me and I had no idea just how much the government was involved with colonizing and destroying this area (shocker.) The government literally lied and convinced people to move here to start a new, enriched life when the towns hadn't even broken ground yet. People were ordered to murder millions of buffalo and rabbits because they thought these animals were destroying/taking up their farm land, they pulled up tons of grasslands in order to force their agricultural habits on an area that doesn’t naturally grow their crops. The Dust Bowl was a completely man-made disaster caused by Americans choosing not to educate themselves and listen to environmental/agricultural experts of the time. We destroyed the land and soil and wouldn’t listen to nature: The answer was there in the land but we ignored it.

sueking365's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative medium-paced

4.0

Audio. Informative non-fiction book about the Dust Bowl, a period of American history which I know little about. Told through the stories of various real people who settled the plains and tried to make a go of life there, despite hardships, weather, and land practices that pretty much destroyed the soil. 

statman's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I really didn't know much about the dust bowl and this was a great coverage of the topic, often told through the eyes of those who lived through it. Quite the tragedy that could have been prevented and that has lessons for us in our day.