Hardscrabble

Hardscrabble
Author: Sandra Dallas
Publsiher: Sleeping Bear Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2018-03-15
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9781534122918

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2019 Wrangler Award for Outstanding Juvenile Book Winner 2019 Spur Award - Western Writer's of America Finalist In 1910, after losing their farm in Iowa, the Martin family moves to Mingo, Colorado, to start anew. The US government offers 320 acres of land free to homesteaders. All they have to do is live on the land for five years and farm it. So twelve-year-old Belle Martin, along with her mother and six siblings, moves west to join her father. But while the land is free, farming is difficult and it's a hardscrabble life. Natural disasters such as storms and locusts threaten their success. And heartbreaking losses challenge their faith. Do the Martins have what it takes to not only survive but thrive in their new prairie life? Told through the eyes of a twelve-year-old girl, this new middle-grade novel from New York Times-bestselling author Sandra Dallas explores one family's homesteading efforts in 1900s Colorado.

Hardscrabble

Hardscrabble
Author: Donna E. Williams
Publsiher: Dundurn
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2013-07-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781459708051

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A tale of deception and adversity, Hardscrabble tells how unscrupulous politicians, emigration agents, and philanthropists lured impoverished emigrants to farm the Muskoka backwoods in the 1870s. What these new settlers weren't told was that their land was situated on the rocky Canadian Shield.

Hardscrabble Road

Hardscrabble Road
Author: Jane Haddam
Publsiher: Minotaur Books
Total Pages: 436
Release: 2007-04-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781429904964

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When a local Philadelphia radio host known for his incendiary right-wing tirades is arrested for possession of illegal prescription drugs, the incident sets into motion a series of events that leads ultimately to the death of a homeless man. In the complicated mix is the local Benedictine monastery, a Nobel-prize-winning leftist academic, and a homeless advocacy group, among others. Now Gregor Demarkian, a retired F.B.I. agent, is hired by a local legal project to look into the circumstances surrounding the death of their former client--a task that leads Demarkian through a mirror-maze of motives and actors as he struggles to unravel a most complex puzzle before the killer strikes again.

Pueblo Hardscrabble Greenhorn

Pueblo  Hardscrabble  Greenhorn
Author: Janet Lecompte
Publsiher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 372
Release: 1980-11-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0806117230

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Pueblo, Hardscrabble, and Greenhorn were among the very first white settlements in Colorado. In their time they were the most westerly settlements in American territory, and they attracted a lively and varied population of mavericks from more civilized parts of the world-from what became New Mexico to the south and from as far east as England. The inhabitants of these little walled towns thrived on the rigor and freedom of frontier life. Many were ex-trappers full already of frontier expertise. Others were enthusiastic neophytes happy to escape problems back home. They sought Mexican wives in Taos or Santa Fe or allied themselves with the native Indian tribes, or both. The fur trade and the illegal liquor trade with the Indians were at first the mainstays of their economy. As time went on they extended their activities to farming illegally on the land owned by the Indians and trading their crops and other trade articles. They enjoyed themselves hunting, gambling, trading, and with their women, freely mixing Spanish, Indian, and Anglo-American cultures in a community without laws or bigotry. This idyll was brought to a close by the Mexican War and the lure of the California Gold Rush of 1849. The expectation of a railroad on the Arkansas brought many of the settlers back, only to be scared away again by the massacre of Pueblo by the Utes in 1854 of which Mrs. Lecompte has reconstructed a very complete record. When the gold seekers rushed to Pikes Peak in 1858 and stayed to establish farms and towns, some of the pioneers of the early days returned with them, and shared their skills and knowledge to make possible the permanent settlements that resulted. Mrs. Lecompte has documented the history of the region from diaries, letters, and the reports of such distinguished passers-by as J. C. Fremont and Francis Parkman. The result is a complete and compelling account of a neglected part of American frontier life. It is illustrated with more than fifty photographs and contemporary drawings.

Harder Than Hardscrabble

Harder Than Hardscrabble
Author: Thad Sitton
Publsiher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2003
Genre: History
ISBN: 0292702388

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Until the U.S. Army claimed 300-plus square miles of hardscrabble land to build Fort Hood in 1942, small communities like Antelope, Pidcoke, Stampede, and Okay scratched out a living by growing cotton and ranching goats on the less fertile edges of the Texas Hill Country. While a few farmers took jobs with construction crews at Fort Hood to remain in the area, almost the entire population—and with it, an entire segment of rural culture—disappeared into the rest of the state. In Harder than Hardscrabble, oral historian Thad Sitton collects the colorful and frequently touching stories of the pre-Fort Hood residents to give a firsthand view of Texas farming life before World War II. Accessible to the general reader and historian alike, the stories recount in vivid detail the hardships and satisfactions of daily life in the Texas countryside. They describe agricultural practices and livestock handling as well as life beyond work: traveling peddlers, visits to towns, country schools, medical practices, and fox hunting. The anecdotes capture a fast-disappearing rural society—a world very different from today's urban Texas.

The Sisters from Hardscrabble Bay

The Sisters from Hardscrabble Bay
Author: Beverly Jensen
Publsiher: Penguin Group
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2011-08-30
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780143119296

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Published posthumously through the efforts of Beverly Jensen's many supporters, this widely acclaimed novel-in-stories offers a richly textured portrait of a bygone era. In 1916, Idella and Avis Hillock live on the edge of a chilly bluff in New Brunswick-a barren world of potato farms and lobster traps, rough men, hard work, and baffling beauty. From "Gone," the heartbreaking account of the crisis that changed their lives forever, through "Wake," a darkly comic saga of funeral plans gone awry, The Sisters from Hardscrabble Bay beautifully charts the trajectory of the Hillocks' divergent lives against the background of a lost slice of Americana.

Summer Light

Summer Light
Author: Roxana Robinson
Publsiher: UPNE
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2013-03-12
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781611684704

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A Maine vacation forces a young woman to challenge her own understanding of the world in a sharply insightful first novel

The Wisest Man in America

The Wisest Man in America
Author: W. D. Wetherell
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 248
Release: 1995
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: UOM:39015033982490

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The wise man of the title is a lumberjack, discovered by a newspaper columnist who made a career of quoting him as the voice of the people. Now, some 40 years later the two relate their past and their friendship in separate chapters, dispensing their philosophy on life. By the author of Chekhov's Sisters.