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The Beet Fields: Memories of a Sixteenth Summer

door Gary Paulsen

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1574173,865 (3.68)2
Young Adult Fiction. Young Adult Literature. For a 16-year-old boy out in the world alone for the first time, every day??s an education in the hard work and boredom of migrant labor; every day teaches him something more about friendship, or hunger, or profanity, or lust??always lust. He learns how a poker game, or hitching a ride, can turn deadly. He discovers the secret sadness and generosity to be found on a lonely farm in the middle of nowhere. Then he joins up with a carnival and becomes a grunt, running a ride and shilling for the geek show. He??s living the hard carny life and beginning to see the world through carny eyes. He??s tough. Cynical. By the end of the summer he??s pretty sure he knows it all. Until… (meer)
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Gary Paulsen's "pseudo-memoir," THE BEET FIELDS: MEMORIES OF A SIXTEENTH SUMMER, is, by his own admission, an attempt to render an honest look at a small piece of his own life. He writes, in an Author's Note, that he has often used parts of his life in other books, "in softer forms," then continues -

"But here it is now, as real as I can write it, and as real as I can remember it happening."

And it does seem pretty damn real - at times even raw - as he tells how he ran away, the summer he turned sixteen, from a home with abusive, alcoholic parents. The central character - presumably the author himself - is unnamed, called only "the boy."

"He was only half awake, fighting sleep, half dreaming, half knowing. His mother was there beside him. She had come to his bed many times drunk, to sleep with him ... But tonight, even half dreaming, he knew something was different, wrong, about her need for him, and he rolled and pushed and stood away in lonely horror, while she lay there moaning ... And he ran ..."

Such a suggestive and shocking introduction immediately brought to mind Earl Thompson's classic and notorious autobiographical novel, A GARDEN OF SAND. And because the protagonist is known only as "the boy," I thought too of Tony Earley's sweetly innocent Depression era novel, JIM THE BOY. But there is more of Thompson's gritty feel to Paulsen's story than there is of Earley's innocence.

Because THE BEET FIELDS is, more than anything, a coming-of-age story, which follows the boy through his various adventures across the flatness of North Dakota, working with Mexican migrants hoeing beets, followed by more dawn-to-dusk labor on a farm, an escape from an unscrupulous deputy sheriff, a harrowing night ride west with a Hungarian immigrant, a short stay with a lonely widow on a barren farm and, finally, a stint as a "carny," with a traveling carnival, where he meets the beautiful and exotic Ruby, who is, to the boy, "simply, everything."

There were things in this book that took me back to my own adolescence, even down to midway burlesque shows in traveling carnivals, something I experienced my fifteenth summer. Even the back-breaking labor of hoeing, the farm work, and the mind-numbing fatigue that follows all felt familiar. Paulsen succeeded in his aim. He made it "real."

At Barely 150 pages, THE BEET FIELDS is a quick read, but its essence will linger. It's a powerful little book about growing up. It may be aimed at a young adult audience, but it will resonate equally with adults. Very highly recommended.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER ( )
  TimBazzett | Jun 7, 2017 |
Known only in the book as “the boy,” a 16-year-old escapes his broken home and drunken parents to survive on his own. He starts out as a migrant worker laboring in beet fields alongside the more adept Mexicans. A farmer later hires him to drive a tractor to work his fields. After being arrested by the sheriff for being a suspected runaway, the boy escapes and ends up hitching a ride with an older woman who takes him in for awhile and has him help repair machinery. Next he joins a traveling carnival where he helps set up rides, rounds up audiences for the acts, and learns the way of the carny. It is also there that he loses his virginity to Ruby, the exotic dancer and wife of the carnival owner. Raw and graphic, but honest all the way through.
  Salsabrarian | Feb 2, 2016 |
Based on Paulsens real life experiences as a migrant worker and carny after running away from home at the age of 16. ( )
  lilibrarian | Oct 3, 2011 |
Ilene Cooper (Booklist, July 2000 (Vol. 96, No. 21))
He's known only as "the boy." Readers meet him twisting away from his drunken mother as she crawls into his bed and follow until he enlists in the army. In between is the ultimate coming-of-age story, told in language that is as clean as bleached bones. But beneath the quiet, direct telling there is every earthy emotion--hunger, exhaustion, fear, passion. After his mother's drunken attempt, the boy runs away and finds work in a beet field, hard, backbreaking work. Mexican migrant workers share their food and teach him about responsibility to the group: he climbs to the rafters and wrings the necks of pigeons so he can add to the cooking pot. He leaves the beet fields when he spies a girl named Lynette, but he never sees her again. He's picked up as a runaway by a deputy who steals his money, then hitchhikes with a man who is killed when a bird flies into the car's windshield. A woman who has lost her son befriends him, but he leaves her to join the carnival--where he sets up and breaks down, shills for the geek who bites the heads off chickens, and has his first sexual experience with Ruby, the carnival's exotic dancer, who helps him learn what it's like to please a woman. Paulsen has visited some of this personal material before, but showed it in a softer light. This time the story is gritty and unblinking. If this were just an uncompromising look at a boy's sixteenth summer, it would be involving. It's Paulsen's ability to put readers behind the boy's eyes--so they can feel what's going on as well as see it--that makes this novel exceptional and so heartbreakingly real. Category: Older Readers. 2000, Delacorte, $15.95. Gr. 9-12. Starred Review.
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1 stem | connieh1433 | Sep 24, 2007 |
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Young Adult Fiction. Young Adult Literature. For a 16-year-old boy out in the world alone for the first time, every day??s an education in the hard work and boredom of migrant labor; every day teaches him something more about friendship, or hunger, or profanity, or lust??always lust. He learns how a poker game, or hitching a ride, can turn deadly. He discovers the secret sadness and generosity to be found on a lonely farm in the middle of nowhere. Then he joins up with a carnival and becomes a grunt, running a ride and shilling for the geek show. He??s living the hard carny life and beginning to see the world through carny eyes. He??s tough. Cynical. By the end of the summer he??s pretty sure he knows it all. Until

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