100 pages • 3 hours read
A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
The wheat is a consistent motif in the story. In each season, mentions of wheat exist. What does wheat symbolize in the story as a whole? How is it tied to individuals’ successes and failures in the period? After she returns home, Billie Jo says she is like the wheat. What does she mean by this? In what scenes or situations in the story is her connection to wheat’s characteristics brought out?
Besides the Kelby home and property, only a few micro-settings appear in the novel: the school, the Palace and other small theaters, the boxcar. What emotions do each of these micro-settings consistently connote? How does each location’s emotional impact compare to the emotions associated with Billie Jo’s home and farm? Use specific details to convey your thoughts regarding each micro-setting.
Billie Jo’s narrative perspective is intimate but limited to her observations, assumptions, and ideas. The reader must use inference skills to speculate on what other characters think and feel. Choose a secondary character and one or several actions or lines associated with that character. Convey the situation, then speculate on how that character must feel or what they think in that moment. Possibilities to consider might be Arley’s asking Billie Jo to keep playing piano, Miss Freeland crying at graduation, Mad Dog visiting after the duster, or Louise bringing apples to the farm.
Out of the Dust takes place over the course of eight consecutive seasons of the year. What, if any, connections exist between the season of the year and the plot events taking place within it? Why is it important to tell this story over the course of two years? Support your thoughts with details and examples from a variety of places in the text.
The story includes several characters who travel seeking better opportunities: Livie’s family, the boy who accepts a haircut and food, the migrant family in the school, and the man who boards Billie Jo’s boxcar. How do those characters collectively paint a picture of the conflict many Americans faced in the 1930s? Of the migrants listed or other migrants in the story, which one or ones is/are most influential to Billie Jo’s development and character arc? Discuss these ideas using an array of details and support from the novel.
People who lived in places like the Panhandle of Oklahoma during the Dust Bowl could not escape the dust; it stuck close during every task, meal, trip, and chore. In this regard, what does the dust in Billie Jo’s story symbolize? What does she mean when she claims that she “can’t get out of something that’s inside” her (205)? Use details and examples from additional places in the narrative to effectively explain your thoughts.
Reread Miss Freeland’s lesson in “The Path of Our Sorrow” (83-84). Are the components of the Kelbys’ external struggles with the land (drought, poor harvests, dust storms, wind, rabbits, grasshoppers) more representative of the conflict type Man Versus Nature or the conflict type Man Versus Man? Explain your rationale using lines from Miss Freeland’s lesson as well as other lines throughout the novel to prove your points.
What connections or parallels exist between Billie Jo’s restlessness and her piano playing skills? How are either or both connected to her decision to leave home? To return? In the future of Out of the Dust, do you foresee Billie Jo leaving home or staying for good? Explain your thoughts using character details and inferences from the text.
How does the novel support the idea that hard work leads to happiness and fulfillment? In what ways does the novel defy that notion? Consider examples to support your rationales from a variety of sections of the story.
Mentions of the bank loans, the President, the rabbit problem, the fossil discovery, and other historical details flavor the narrative and inform the reader about the setting. What historical details provide the sharpest imagery to depict Billie Jo’s surroundings and given circumstances? What historical details inform you as a reader to help make sense of character actions and motivations? Does the format of a verse novel complement or hinder the delivery of historical details in this book?
Plus, gain access to 8,800+ more expert-written Study Guides.
Including features:
By Karen Hesse
5th-6th Grade Historical Fiction
View Collection
7th-8th Grade Historical Fiction
View Collection
Art
View Collection
Books on U.S. History
View Collection
Brothers & Sisters
View Collection
Childhood & Youth
View Collection
Class
View Collection
Class
View Collection
Coming-of-Age Journeys
View Collection
Community
View Collection
Coping with Death
View Collection
Daughters & Sons
View Collection
Education
View Collection
Fathers
View Collection
Fiction with Strong Female Protagonists
View Collection
Forgiveness
View Collection
Grief
View Collection
Guilt
View Collection
Juvenile Literature
View Collection
Mortality & Death
View Collection
Mothers
View Collection
Music
View Collection
Novels & Books in Verse
View Collection
Pride & Shame
View Collection
Required Reading Lists
View Collection
Safety & Danger
View Collection