Book description
These four interlinked stories encapsulate Martha Gellhorn's
firsthand observation of the Great Depression. Fiction crafted with
documentary accuracy, they vividly render the gradual spiritual
collapse of the simple, homely sufficiency of American life in the
face of sudden unemployment, desperate poverty and hopelessness. They
catch the mood of a generation sucked into indifference' and of young
men who no longer believe in man or God, let alone private industry'.
Martha was the youngest of a squad of sixteen, handpicked reporters
who were paid to file accurate, confidential reports on the human
stories behind the statistics of the Depression directly to
Roosevelt's White House. In these pages, we understand the real cost
of sudden destitution on a vast scale. We taste the dust in the mouth,
smell the disease and feel the hopelessness and the despair. And here,
too, we can hear the earliest cadences of the voice of a writer who
went on to become, arguably, the greatest female war reporter of the
20th century.