Resilience at the Heart of a Story

Guest blog by Shelley Blanton-Stroud


I’ve always been drawn to the topic of resilience—it’s the heart of my family’s origin

story.


I grew up in Bakersfield, California, surrounded by grannies, grandpas, aunts, uncles,

and cousins, whose shared history was a Route 66 migration out of Texas and

Oklahoma during the 1930s and 40s Dust Bowl, when nearly-biblical drought combined with

failed farming practices to make the land go barren. This was my family’s slice of the

Great Depression.


Grown-up talk around plates of Thanksgiving turkey often turned on that escape from

dried-up farmland, villainous bankers, untrustworthy government, toward California,

where orchards were said to overflow with oranges and there was a fair paycheck for

every hard worker.


Conditions were not as advertised.


More people looked for work than found it. And when they did get the golden chance to

pick Central Valley cotton or potatoes, they found themselves forced to accept unfair

payment for backbreaking labor. Bosses had them over a barrel—work for pennies or

no beans in the pot. Add to that the hatred they often felt from the citizens of the towns

whose roadsides they camped on. These, of course, are all conditions experienced by

many migrant farmworkers today.


The Central Valley of my childhood was filled with descendants of people who lived

through this time, on one side of the paycheck or the other. Looking around, it became

clear that some of them seemed to have been made gritty by that shared history, while

others were permanently harmed, physically, emotionally, spiritually, financially. Why, I

wondered. Why does tragedy and hardship make some people stronger and debilitate

others?


This question is at the heart of my Depression-era novel, Copy Boy.


To prepare to write it, I immersed myself in books that looked at resilience in that time

and place. I continue to gravitate to books that deal with resilience even now. Here are a

few I recommend.


For me, the godfather of resilience literature is Viktor Frankl’s Man Search for Meaning.

In half of this slim volume, he tells in clear, simple, deeply-moving language, what

happened in his five years in Auschwitz and other Nazi death camps, focusing on his

struggle to find reasons to live. In the other half, he describes the philosophy he

developed as a result of this experience, that man’s deepest urge is to search for

meaning and purpose. He suggests that such a quest makes it possible not only to

survive, but sometimes to thrive in terrible circumstances.


Linda Gordon’s Dorothea Lange, A Life Beyond Limits is a fascinating biography. She

details how Works Progress Administration documentary photographer Lange

developed as a world-class artist—you’ll recognize her famous Migrant Mother, Nipomo

—in spite of suffering from lifelong, painful side effects of polio. In fact, it is implied, her

excellence was not in spite of her polio, but, partly, because of it.


I’ve recently read and loved an advance reader copy of Gretchen Cherington’s memoir,

Poetic License (coming in August 2020). In the beginning, it seems to be a fascinating

story of the charms of growing up in an iconic literary household. (Her father was

Pulitzer Prize– and National Book Award-winning poet Richard Eberhart.) But as the

story progresses, we see the story as something else. Cherington must choose whether

to maintain her family’s literary mythology, silencing her own voice, or to tell the truth,

publicly, about being sexually violated in that home. Cherington shows how hard it is to

speak out, and how right. She benefits from that struggle.


In Ashley Sweeney’s historical novel, Answer Creek, we meet protagonist, 19-year-old

Ada. She’s a member of the historic Donner Party. In Sweeney’s sensitive hands we

learn how, having made their famous, fateful decision, Ashley and her group is stuck in

Truckee for a blizzard-filled winter, forced to consider extreme choices to survive.

Sweeney has based this story on impeccable research, putting the reader in the

position of asking timely questions—What can we do to survive? How do we make our

choices? Is sheer survival the only relevant goal?


In her novel Luz (out June 9), author Debra Thomas tells the story of Alma, who relies

on natural strength and determination as she journeys to the United States to find her

missing migrant farmworker father. Alma and the reader must ask what price she is

willing to pay to complete this quest. Thomas suggests that every journey requires

courage and resilience—especially those involving great risk—but the true test is

whether the traveler arrives at the story’s end with tenderness and humanity intact.


Shelley Blanton-Stroud is the author of novel Copy Boy (She Writes Press, June 2020).

Blanton-Stroud grew up in Bakersfield, California, the daughter of Dust Bowl immigrants

who lived in Federal work camps made famous by Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath. Her

novel is set in the Great Depression and features the lives of Okie field workers, in

particular a girl who has to become a boy to get work. Blanton-Stroud teaches college

writing at Sacramento State and consults with writers in the energy industry. She codirects

Stories on Stage Sacramento, where actors perform the stories of established

and emerging authors, and serves on the advisory board of 916 Ink, an arts-based

creative writing nonprofit for children. She has also served on the Writers’ Advisory

Board for the Belize Writers’ Conference. Visit her website at shelleyblantonstroud.com


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Published on June 15, 2020 01:03
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