Read Ghosts of Tom Joad Online
Authors: Peter Van Buren
Published by Luminis Books
1950 East Greyhound Pass, #18, PMB 280,
Carmel, Indiana, 46033, U.S.A.
Copyright © Peter Van Buren, 2014
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Cover design for
Ghosts of Tom Joad
by Rachel Marks. Cover image courtesy Shutterstock.
Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-935462-90-3
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-935462-91-0
Printed in the United States of America
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L
UMINIS
B
OOKS
Meaningful Books That Entertain
“Politicians come and go, but the critical issues tearing at our society do not. In his new book
Ghosts of Tom Joad,
Van Buren turns to the larger themes of social justice and equality, and asks uncomfortable questions about where we are headed. He is no stranger to speaking truth to power, and the critical importance of doing that in a democracy cannot be overestimated. Standing up and saying âThis is wrong' is the basis of a free society. The act of doing so must be often practiced, and regularly tested.”
âDaniel Ellsberg, whistleblower,
The Pentagon Papers
“A lyrical, and deeply reported look at America's decline from the bottom up. Though a work of fiction,
Ghosts of Tom Joad
isâsadly, and importantlyâbased on absolute fact. Buy it, read it, think about it.”
âJanet Reitman, contributing editor,
Rolling Stone,
author of
Inside Scientology: the Story of America's Most Secretive Religion
“At the State Department Peter Van Buren was a pioneer blowing the whistle in defense of human rights by challenging torture. In this novel, he blows the whistle in defense of America's roots by challenging the dehumanizing consequences when big business abandoned the Rust Belt in Ohio. This tale of a mythical Earl's relentless quest for an American dream that has become a mirage is worthy of the voices that inspired it, from Woody Guthrie to John Steinbeck to Bruce Springsteen.”
âTom Devine, Legal Director, Government Accountability Project
“Van Buren is passionate about the truth, and his new book
Ghosts of Tom Joad
is a masterpiece, a must-read about the decline of our economy and social structure, an inspirational story showing how one man and one nation can claw its way back to greatness.”
âKathryn Milofsky, Producer Reporter ITV (UK) / Executive Producer of “The Brian Oxman Show” (US)
“A twenty-first century
Grapes of Wrath,
this memorable volume documents in a concrete, personal, often moving way the despair among many in America today due to economic and family hardships. In the words of its fictional but all too real narratorâEarl, from a rust-belt small Ohio town, unable get a permanent job or start a familyââthey took away the factory, but left the people; this ain't a story, it's an autopsy.'”
âJohn H. Brown, Adjunct Professor of Liberal Studies, Georgetown University
“In Peter Van Buren's
Ghosts of Tom Joad,
things do not always look better in the morning. In this autopsy of the new depression, you turn a page and keep reading, hoping the story's left-behind people catch up ⦠because one way or another, they're us.”
âDiplopundit
“In
Ghosts of Tom Joad,
Peter Van Buren invokes his powerful storytelling gifts to portray a job-starved Ohio community. This gripping, contemporary novel in the tradition of
The Grapes of Wrath
is more real than realâand a worthy successor to Van Buren's reporting about Iraq in his courageous
We Meant Well.”
âAndrew Kreig, Director, Justice Integrity Project
“Ghosts of Tom Joad
is a powerful and provocative tale of the working poor. Although the story is fiction, the themes are anything but. In a lively yet serious manner, Peter Van Buren tackles one of the most important issues of our dayâhow can a free society deal with the costs associated with creative destruction?
Ghosts of Tom Joad
is required reading for all concerned with the future of our country.”
âChristopher J. Coyne, F.A. Harper Professor of Economics, George Mason University
“Ghosts of Tom Joad
takes a hard, honest look at where millions of Americans are today: living a marginal existence, a no-exit life of grinding poverty. What Peter Van Buren is able to show through his gritty, close-to-the-ground prose, is how capitalism destroys the human spirit, leaving its victims devoid of any purpose in life. Those of us in our sixties and seventies are completely bewildered at where the America of our youthâa very different sort of place from todayâwent. The answer is contained in the pages of this book: the values of âthe market' finally swamped everything else, destroyed any values except those of rapaciousness and self-interest. âI think God owes us an apology,' says the central character of this novel. No, I'd reply; but America certainly does.”
âMorris Berman, historian and author of
The Twilight of American Culture, Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire
and
Why America Failed: The Roots of Imperial Decline
“I can't tell you what an impact this book had on me. The writing is beautiful, but the story is brutal. I grew up in and around these places, and to say it is grim is an understatement.
Ghosts
captures everythingâthe human complexity and the profound cultural/economic damages. The story stuck with me long after I stopped reading.”
“I grew up and later worked in a âReeve, Ohio.' While experiencing a visceral recognition, Van Buren's intimate portrait of this dying town made me feel like a stranger peeking in on places many Americans have no idea exist. I will never again drive by the old manufacturing towns of my youth without wondering about the shadows within, as drawn so mesmerizingly in Van Buren's relentlessly vivid portrayal. As Steinbeck's
Grapes of Wrath
made a place for the Dust Bowl in our literary canon,
Ghosts
aims to do the same for the devastating industrial decline of the late-American 20th century.”
âKelley Vlahos,
The American Conservative
“Bottom line: It's accessible and compelling, a mix of
Canterbury Tales
meets
Grapes of Wrath
meets
American Beauty.”
âCharlie Sherpa, military blogger,
Red Bull Rising
“Have and have-nots have always existed.
Ghosts of Tom Joad
brings this conflict so often touched upon in literature into a modern day, down-turned economy. Riveted with a bit of nostalgia for the rosier '70s and '80s, the story manages to find humor in an otherwise dismal life. When you choose to ride this bus with Earl, you'll find yourself reminiscing with him, rooting for him, and yearning for the release he strives to find.”
âLisa Ehrle, Teacher-Librarian, Aurora, Colorado.
“Haunting and a kick in the gut, Peter Van Buren's first novel,
Ghosts of Tom Joad,
lays bare the brutal and very personal reality of America's Great Recession. In his first book,
We Meant Well,
Peter blew the whistle on the catastrophic effects of American policy in Iraq; now Peter turns his necessary and just attention on the effects of American policy at home. Want to understand the true and honest nature of our modern society and the American way of life? Then read
Ghosts of Tom Joad.”
âMatthew Hoh, Peace and Veterans advocate, former Marine
“Peter Van Buren has an amazing ability to draw the reader into his stories. That the author of the definitive work on the debacle of our post-war reconstruction of Iraq has now set his sights on the debacle of our post-industrial America makes perfect sense. Many of the actors are the same, with the same intent.”
âDaniel McAdams, Ron Paul Institute
“Like his heroes in Steinbeck and Agee before him, the author takes us on an unflinching tour of America's âbroken places,' yet true to his predecessors Van Buren never loses sight of his rough characters' resilient humanity, their deeply held yearning for the grounding connection of family and community, their stubborn hope for a better life. An urgent, important story, and an incredibly necessary book.”
âJames Spione, Academy-Award nominated documentarian,
Incident in Baghdad
and
Silenced
For Woodyâthis book kills fascists.
L
ET THE YOUNG
men in other small Ohio towns dream of bright lights. In Reeve, Ohio we knew growing up we were going to work in that factory. We said, “Graduate today, factory tomorrow.” Life was rich, fat, happy enough. But we thought that factory in Reeve was drawn in ink, when it was really watercolor. After she closed on us, I was a telemarketer. A tire salesman, one McJob after another. Christmas help. The development that had been planned for Reeve, the one that was gonna bring in big retail stores and jobs for everyone, fizzled on some complicated six-way derivative financing deal, and so, long after they tore down the factory, the land stayed vacant. There were pieces of machinery from the factory left on the ground, too unimportant to sell off, too heavy to move, too bulky to bury, left scattered like clues from a lost civilization, droppings of our failure. Might as well been the bones of the men who worked there. I think God owes us an apology.
I climbed out of the foxhole to see almost every one of them running in circles, throwing snowballs at each other and shouting, laughing and throwing some more snowballs. Boredom and young boys do not mix well and after what seemed like forever doing nothing, we had found something. I packed a tight one, pulling off my gloves so as to let my hands melt the snow enough to form an ice ball. With some element of a practiced eye, I hurled that snowball as hard as I could at some boy about twenty yards away, smacking him straight on his nose. He looked over at me more surprised than anything and when I saw him laugh, I laughed too and went over to make sure there were no hard feelings. His nose was bloodied all right, as I had something of an arm back then, with the red blood dripping on that white snow. As he laughed, his head moved, flinging the drops of blood in a wider circle around us both. It was kinda pretty, the red and the white, the drops giving off a tiny bit of steam and melting just a tiny bit into the crust of the snow.
The CEO of Wal-Mart's hourly wage works out to $8,701. An entry-level Wal-Mart clerk in Arkansas makes six bucks an hour, below minimum wage, because she's a trainee under local law.
In a decent world that would have been the end of that day. I would have walked home, had dinner, maybe asked my own father about what had happened. Going to bed and waking up the next morning usually solved problems in the small town of Reeve, Ohio, as many times the smell of a new day absorbed what had passed the night before.
In the last thirty years, the share of national income of the top one percent of Americans doubled. For most of the remaining 99 percent of households, the share went down.
But I was not there, I was as far away from there as it was possible to be, and so I heeded the Sergeant and ran to my hole. Whatever that man
knew about whores and cursing, he did know equally about the real side of war that had just been visited on me, and so I ran to my hole and, following his shouts, prepared and aimed my rifle forward, expecting the North Koreans or maybe Satan himself to emerge from those woods.
At the time of the fall of Rome only two thousand people owned all of the land between the Rhine and the Euphrates rivers. In 2014, 85 people own half of the world's wealth.
There is nothing in the world that sounds like a mortar. We did not know whether it was the noise we made, the movement we made on Hill 124, or simply one of those coincidences that caused mortar shells to fall on us twenty or so boys making snow angels. We did not know if the mortar shells were fired by our men, North Korean men, or spit out by an angry God, but they did fall on us. The snow did its job, deadening the sound of the explosions, catching some of the shrapnel, which, white-hot, made some tiny puffs of steam as it melted through the snow crust, and then absorbing the fluid of several boys, one from Indiana recently suffering from a bloody nose. I was fine, not hurt, just watching the impressions of snow angels fill with blood around me as Hill 124 tried to kill us.