Saturday 4
No wind. Awful heat. Baked us all like an oven. Kids got final report cards. Rita all A’s. Joan got a C in conduct. I told her better. She folded her arms and stuck out her lip.
In Mitchell during the “Dirty 30s,” Margaret Spader Neises, a young mother, wife, and phenomenally hard worker, was committed to keeping her concerns alive: children, farm animals, vegetable gardens, relationships, experiences. In seven small ruled notebooks, premiums from The Old Line Cedar Rapids Life Insurance Company, cover embossed with a fat, juicy cob of corn, Margaret recorded her daily domestic matters. The events Margaret tenaciously chronicled in sparse entries of 2-4 cursive sentences are deceptively quotidian, but like many journals from working class women throughout time, they capture snapshots that help illustrate a panoramic view of life during a time that tried many souls.
We follow Margaret through boredom and upheave. After farm life becomes unsustainable, she documents the quest to find affordable housing in Mitchell large enough to shelter her growing Catholic brood. While her prose is economical and restrained, a reader can sense the diary offered an outlet and respite from myriad frustrations: her husband’s intermittent jobs, the banker nipping at their heels, an overly flirtatious neighbor, the Sysphisian endeavor to keep a clean house when perched precariously on the Dust Bowl’s edge. Coded into the text with underlines and stars are milestones: the births of babies, the serious sickness of loved ones, the death of her mother.
Wednesday 1
Made Pa come to supper. He brought most of the last of their spuds. Said he couldn’t eat that many alone anyway. 4 bu. Sure glad. Paying 55¢ a bu here.
Margaret’s grandson Craig Volk based A Dust Bowl Book of Days, 1932, on his grandmother’s journals as well as an unpublished memoir of his mother, Joan (the petulant C-getter in conduct.) Volk, who was born and raised in Mitchell, is a professor of theatre, film and video production at the University of Colorado-Denver. Volk was a writer for Northern Exposure and has published three books of poetry.
Volk inherited Margaret’s diaries from his mother, who passed away in 1999, and while he’d always kept them in view and therefore in mind, he’d never read them deeply until a recent sabbatical. “Then I realized how much I actually had,” says Volk. “They’re these little, little books. One thinks ‘How can so much information and connection to her and her life be in these little, short passages?’ It was like creating a crazy quilt, finding these fragments, images and occasional little sections of dialogue that were more like reflective thought. I realized, ‘Boy! What a remarkable woman she was.’”
Volk met Margaret only twice. She died young, a loss that deeply marked Volk’s mother, who later wrote about it in her own diary. Volk used artistic license to merge his mother’s diary passages into the book. “Grandmother Margaret was, even in her diaries, a Catholic woman growing up in the first half of the 20th century. She wasn’t always forthcoming about what she was feeling, her doubts and misgivings. So, the passages about Grandma Margaret’s death, I drew more from my mother. That’s really both of them, in a way.”
Taciturn though Margaret’s entries may be, many vividly convey a scene. “I fell under the sway of the imagist poets when I was in high school and that the best way to get at any real theme is to contextualize it with concrete images,” says Volk. “William Carlos Williams says, ‘No ideas, but in things.’ Margaret had a sense of that. She was exhausted, oftentimes not feeling well. She would write about the mundane, the day-to-day things, her fears. Every now and then this would generate a powerful image that spoke reams to me. She was an imagist poet in the making.”
Volk says it’s no coincidence he became a writer. “I know from my grandmother’s and mother’s diaries that they were both great readers. I can never recall not seeing my mother reading at night. My mother was always very pleased that I went into the arts. She and my father were both very supportive, even for all the worrisome struggles until I was able to be financially secure.”
Not a small leap of faith for children of the Dust Bowl. “That dark cloud followed them forever,” says Volk. “Even though my dad had been to war, I had relatives who had been gassed in World War I, folks who had a really difficult life. But the real dark cloud wasn’t the Great War, it was the Great Depression. My father was a car salesman. He always said if it rained an inch, he’d sell two cars. There’s the idea that you put money away for a rainy day. But in South Dakota, you save money for the un-rainy day.”
A Dust Bowl Book of Days, 1932 by Craig Volk is available at sdhspress.com