Ruth
Suckow & Midwestern
Farm & Community Life
The short stories and novels of Ruth Suckow
preserve and
explore Midwestern farm and small town life in the first half of the
twentieth
century. Of special note are her insights
into:
The Rural Community
- In her short story “A
Rural Community,” Ralph Chapin, an orphan raised by Luke Hockaday
and his wife on their farm, comes home after his travels as a freelance
newsman. This story celebrates the deep
stability, continuity, and quiet of rural life. As
he leaves on the train at the end of the story, Suckow writes:
“Tomorrow, this little place would seem a million miles away—almost out
of existence. But he was aware that since
he had stepped off the train in the morning, the current of his
thoughts had been changed. He felt
steadied, deeply satisfied. He looked
toward the dark pastures beyond the row of dusky willow trees. They widened slowly into the open country
which lay silent, significant, motionless, immense, under the stars,
with its sense of something abiding. To
come back to it was to touch the core of things.”
- In the short story “Midwestern
Primitive,” Bert Statzer tries to impress others by imitating East
Coast fashions and styles while her mother, Mrs. Honenschuh, a German
farm wife (and widow), insists on being totally herself.
Suckow contrasts Mrs. Honenschuh’s real garden and flowers
with Bert’s fake sweet peas, and asks us to evaluate what is really
“Midwestern primitive”?
Farm Renters
- In Suckow’s short story “The
Renters,” honest, hardworking renter Fred Mutchler
and his wife face a series of misfortunes. Their
bad luck is enhanced by the fact that “Old Lady Hunt,” who lives in
town, would rather have her grand farmhouse fall to ruin than let the
Mutchlers live in it. This moving short
story explores the ways the rich intimidate the poor, how poverty
compounds bad luck, the difficulty of maintaining hope, and the
difficulty of breaking out of this cycle.
Hired Hands
- In “A Start in Life,”
Daisy Switzer must leave her hard working widow mother to become a
hired girl. Daisy’s “start in life”
includes her first recognition of class and the hardness of life.
Leaving the Farm
- The short story “Retired”
presents a day in the life of Seth Patterson, a retired farmer
who has moved to town. March weather makes
Seth yearn for the farm. The retired
farmers gather at the Produce House, but Seth wonders “When a man’s
work was over, what was there left to live for, anyway?”
- In “A Pilgrim and a
Stranger,” ailing retired farmer Enos Bush yearns to return home to
Iowa from his son’s home in Denver. This short story again underscores the
importance of place and work.
- In “Just Him and Her,”
Lew Davies and his wife are retired farmers who have moved to town. Another story that explores loss of identity
and purpose as well as human caring.
We invite comments and short and long articles on
rural and
community life in Suckow’s life and works.
Send your comments and articles to Mike Dargan (Dargan@gmail.com) and they will be
placed on this site.
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June 9, 2006