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Woody Guthrie and the Dust Bowl Ballads

A Graphic Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The "sepia artwork and lyrical prose" in this graphic novel biography "beat with a love for Guthrie's music and America's beauty" (Guardian, UK).
Using the sepia tones of the Dust Bowl as his palette, author and artist Nick Hayes tells the story of world-famous folk singer and songwriter Woody Guthrie. The tale starts in the 1920s when Guthrie was a teenager supporting himself in dried-up, post-boomtown Oklahoma. Picking up a harmonica and eventually a battered guitar, Guthrie finds solace in the ancient lineage of folksong.
Hayes charts the musician's course from Oklahoma and Texas towns ravaged by dust and the Depression to boxcars, factory farms, and the migrant camps of California, highlighting Guthrie's dedication to singing American folk tunes and creating his own modern classics along the way. Hayes ends his portrait in 1940, at the pivotal time when Guthrie makes his way to New York and writes "This Land Is Your Land," his iconic anthem tinged with both optimism and clear-eyed reality.
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    • Booklist

      Starred review from March 15, 2016
      This land was made for you and me. Every grade-schooler in America learns the refrain from the popular folk song, This Land is Your Land, but not much about Woody Guthrie, the singer, songwriter, and activist who wrote it. This fictionalized biography follows Guthrie through his early, formative years as he and his family struggled to survive the destitute poverty of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. Increasingly disillusioned with American politics and the government's abandonment of its poorest citizens, Guthrie was compelled to speak out, tirelessly crisscrossing the nation to entertain and advocate for the nation's poorest people with his songs, eventually earning himself a permanent place as one of America's great folk heroes. This sympathetic portrait offers an engaging and accessible look at Guthrie's personal life, the political climate of the 1930's, and the physical landscapes Guthrie loved so much. Gorgeously rendered in a sepia-toned palette with broad black outlines, the expressive, woodcut-like illustrations and varied lettering styles quietly evoke the time period, while the stylized figures capture the haunted looks of people with nothing left to lose. While Guthrie's eccentricities no doubt caused more family difficulty than is shown here, this captivating marriage of art and words offers a revealing, evocative look at this complex, talented American icon.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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