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DISCUSSION QUESTIONS The Four Winds |
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1.
“Hope is a coin I carry. . . . There were times in my journey when it
felt as if that penny and the hope it represented were the only things
that kept me going.” (1) What is the significance of the fact that it is
an American penny? In what ways does hope anchor us in the moment, and
in what ways does it push us forward? Do you or your family have any
keepsakes that represent your family’s hope for the future?
2.
“But we women of the Great Plains worked from sunup to sundown, too,
toiled on wheat farms until we were as dry and baked as the land we
loved.” (1) The stories of women have largely gone undocumented
throughout history, and this era is no different. It is changing,
slowly, and women’s courage and determination and victories are being
brought to light. How are women’s stories different? Why do you think
they’ve gone unreported for so long? Do you think sharing these stories
will make a difference to future generations?
3.
Life was very different for unmarried young women in earlier
generations. Expectations for their future were sharply defined. How is
Elsa shaped by these expectations and her failure to meet them? Do you
think it would have been the same for her in New York City? Did you feel
compressed by expectation when you were growing up? Do you think these
societal mores were designed to keep women “in their place”? How
difficult is it to defy both family and society in a small town?
4.
“She wished she’d never read The Age of Innocence. What good came from
all this unexpressed longing? She would never fall in love, never have a
child of her own.” (8) Literature is, quite honestly, the opening of a
door. Through that door, Elsa saw whole other lives, other futures. What
books influenced you when you were growing up? Did any novel and/or
character change your perception of either yourself or the world? Did
you identify with Elsa and her journey throughout this book? In what
way?
5.
“She had to believe there was grit in her, even if it had never been
tested or revealed.” (9) This sentence highlights Elsa’s essentially
hopeful nature, even though she doesn’t believe in herself. Her family
and her world have pared her down to inconsequence. Does this idea
resonate with you? Have you seen it at work in other people? In
yourself?
6.
In 1920s America, there was significant prejudice against Italians; we
see that prejudice in Elsa’s own family. What does Rafe represent to
Elsa on the night they meet? Is it simply sex and loneliness? Or do you
think there’s something deeper involved? Another small defiance against
her parents’ small-mindedness? What does it say about Elsa that she went
with Rafe so willingly?
7.
“My land tells its story if you listen. The story of our family. We
plant, we tend, we harvest. I make wine from grape cuttings that I
brought here from Sicily, and the wine I make reminds me of my father.
It binds us, one to another, as it has for generations. Now it will bind
you to us.” (51) How are people connected to the land that they occupy?
What about the land they farm? Describe that unique and complicated
connection.
8.
Motherhood changes Elsa in almost every way. What does she learn by
becoming a mother? What does she learn about motherhood from Rose? How
does motherhood strengthen a woman? How does it weaken her? How does
Elsa remain “herself” after giving birth? How does she change?
9.
Few things can break a woman’s heart like motherhood. “Elsa grieved
daily for the loss of that closeness with her firstborn. At first she’d
tried to scale the walls of her daughter’s adolescent, irrational anger;
she’d volleyed back with words of love, but Loreda’s continuing,
thriving impatience with Elsa had done worse than grind her down. It had
resurrected all the insecurities of childhood.” (66) If you’re a parent,
did this passage resonate with you? Why?
10.
The adolescent years can be especially difficult on mothers and
daughters. Did you dislike Loreda during these years? Did you understand
her?
11.
“Tony and Rose were the kind of people who expected life to be hard and
had become tougher to survive. . . . They might have come off the boat
as Anthony and Rosalba, but hard work and the land had turned them into
Tony and Rose. Americans. They would die of thirst and hunger before
they’d give that up.” (76) Do you think this attitude is a common thread
in those who across generations have come to chase the “American Dream”?
Why is land so important to that dream? How does one “become American”?
12.
There is a strong thread running through this novel about man’s
connection to the land. During the Dust Bowl, while many families went
west in search of work and a better life, most of them stayed behind on
their parched farms. Why do you think that is?
13.
What bonds Loreda and her father? What dreams do they share? Do they
intend to exclude Elsa, whom they perceive as just a workhorse? Or is
she partially to blame for being ostracized? How does her lack of
self-esteem color her relationships with her husband and eldest child?
14.
What do you think about Rafe? Was he as trapped by his family’s
expectations as Elsa had been by her own? Did you expect him to leave?
15.
How would you describe the Texas landscape the author paints? With its
dust storms and earth dry and zigzag cracked, is it like any you’ve
known?
16.
“Even if they didn’t speak of their love, or share their feelings in
long, heartfelt conversations, the bond was there. Sturdy. They’d sewn
their lives together in the silent way of women unused to conversation.
Day after day, they worked together, prayed together, held their growing
family together through the hardships of farm life.” (90–91) Do you
share a similar bond with the women in your life—either as a mother, a
daughter, or a daughter-in-law? With your friends? Why do you think
female bonding is so important to women?
17.
Why does Rafe leave and what is he chasing out west? Do you have
sympathy for how broken he felt by the poverty and hardship? Should Elsa
have agreed to go with him? How does Elsa aim to fill his void, and why
does she believe she loves him even after the abandonment?
18.
Why does the Martinelli family stay under such brutal conditions—the
heat, the dust storms, the lack of food, and the dying livestock? Does
it reveal anything about the grit that literally fills their bodies?
What choices do they have, and what might you have done during the
drought? Were you surprised that Elsa set off without her in-laws? Would
you have had the courage to do the same?
19.
How have the Dust Bowl and “going west” been treated by the American
imagination (perhaps in song or cinema)? What has been glamorized, and
what grittiness has been left out or effectively captured? Elsa compares
them to the early pioneers in their covered wagons. Is that an accurate
comparison?
20.
Life in California is not at all what the migrants expected, what
advertisements had led them to believe. The locals treat them badly, are
afraid of them. Why is that? How does the treatment of migrants in
California during the Great Depression mirror the treatment of
immigrants today? How is it the same? How is it different?
21.
How do Elsa and her family remain unbroken even while enduring crippling
poverty, food and shelter insecurity, and living in a town that is
hostile to them? Would they have fared better in Texas?
22.
What do Jack and the Communist union organizers offer the migrant
workers, and Loreda in particular? Why is it a risk to associate with
them and what is Elsa’s hesitation?
23.
In the 1930s, communism and socialism were on the rise, partially in
response to the grinding poverty, joblessness, and despair. The
Communists claimed that “communism is the new Americanism.” Can you
understand why people believed in that? What do we know now that people
didn’t know then? How do you think these perceptions have changed over
time?
24.
Discuss the shift in thinking that happens between generations—the
freedoms longed for and the sacrifices required. The Greatest Generation
was shaped by the Great Depression and World War II. They willingly
sacrificed for each other and did what they could to help. How is the
modern world different? How do we face our own dark times?
25.
How does the Great Depression setting of The Four Winds compare to
America during the pandemic? What lessons of resilience and healing
might be embedded in this story? How might others’ struggles inspire us?
Do you have any family stories from the Depression?
26.
They say that those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat
it. During the COVID- 19 pandemic, Americans were faced with many of the
same challenges of the Great Depression. Did we learn from previous
generations? What differences can you see in the two difficult times?
What similarities? How do you think future generations will judge the
America of today?
27.
“Courage is fear you ignore.” Discuss this. How do Elsa’s and Loreda’s
actions embody this idea? Fighting for any kind of social equality or
radical change often requires great personal sacrifice.
28.
Fighting for any kind of social equality or radical change often
requires great personal sacrifice. How does Elsa represent the courage
it takes to stand up and make trouble and be counted?
29.
Why was it so important for Loreda to get her mother back to Texas, even
if at such a high cost? How did she finally come to understand her
mother and her choices through a new lens?
30.
Did you find the end of Elsa’s and her family’s journey satisfying?
Where do you think Ant and Loreda ended up? How do you see Loreda’s life
being like her mother’s? How will it be different? |
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