ISBN-13: 9783565255009 / Angielski / Miękka / 108 str.
On the afternoon of April 14, 1935, a wall of black earth, three miles high and hundreds of miles wide, swept across the Great Plains, turning day into instant midnight. They called it "Black Sunday," the terrifying apex of a catastrophe that defined a decade. But the Dust Bowl was not a natural disaster; it was a man-made apocalypse. "The Black Sunday" exposes the combination of agricultural hubris, economic greed, and climatic ignorance that led farmers to strip the protective buffalo grass from millions of acres of prairie, leaving the soil vulnerable to the relentless winds.This book chronicles the harrowing decade of the "dirty thirties," describing the "dust pneumonia" that filled children's lungs, the static electricity that shorted out cars, and the plagues of jackrabbits and locusts that followed the dust. It follows the desperate exodus of the "Okies," families forced to flee their buried homesteads for a California that did not want them.Through gripping eyewitness accounts and meteorological analysis, James Caldwell paints a vivid picture of what happens when humanity breaks the biological skin of the earth, offering a stark historical warning for our modern environmental challenges. It is a story of resilience in the face of a sky turned black.
It wasn't a storm; it was the land itself rising up to choke the people who had abused it. The lungs of a generation filled with dust.