Out of the Dust

Out of the Dust

by Karen Hesse
Billie Jo is a teenage girl who does her best to survive living in the Oklahoma Panhandle during the Dust Bowl. Billie Jo is mature for her age and possesses many stereotypically male characteristics because her father raised her like a son. Additionally, Billie Jo is passionate about playing the piano, a hobby she shares with her mother. Although life is hard, Billie Jo manages to find happiness and excitement in the little things, like the occasional rainstorm and the apples from her mother’s tree. However, Billie Jo’s life changes for the worse after her pregnant mother is caught in a terrible housefire and dies, a traumatic event that also leaves Billie Jo’s hands mutilated. Billie Jo partially blames herself for her mother’s death, though she blames her father more. The accident drives a wedge between Billie Jo and her father, which persists for most of the novel. Following the fire, Billie Jo feels alone. She cannot play music anymore because of her hands, and everyone gives her pitying looks, which she cannot stand. In a climactic moment, Billie Jo runs away from the Panhandle and makes it all the way to Arizona before realizing she would rather be with her father than alone, no matter how difficult that relationship has become. After returning home, Billie Jo starts forgiving her father and slowly welcomes Louise, her father’s new girlfriend, into her life. Although life is still difficult, and she will never fully recover from her traumatic past, Billie Jo ends the novel feeling hopeful as she starts playing the piano again.

Billie Jo Quotes in Out of the Dust

The Out of the Dust quotes below are all either spoken by Billie Jo or refer to Billie Jo. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
).

1. Beginning: August 1920 Quotes

Daddy named me Billie Jo.
He wanted a boy.
Instead,
he got a long-legged girl
with a wide mouth
and cheekbones like bicycle handles.
He got a redheaded, freckle-faced, narrow-hipped girl
with a fondness for apples
and a hunger for playing fierce piano.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother, Billie Jo’s Father
Related Symbols: Apples
Explanation and Analysis:

3. Losing Livie Quotes

Now Livie’s gone west,
out of the dust
on her way to California
where the wind takes a rest sometimes.
And I’m wondering what kind of friend I am,
wanting my feet on that road to another place,
instead of Livie’s.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Livie Killian
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:

14. Debts Quotes

I ask Ma
how,
after all this time
Daddy still believes in rain.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother, Billie Jo’s Father
Related Symbols: Rain
Page Number: 27
Explanation and Analysis:

16. State Tests Quotes

I wish she’d give me a little more to hold on to than
“I knew you could.”
Instead she makes me feel like she’s just
taking me in like I was
so much flannel dry on the line.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother
Page Number: 30
Explanation and Analysis:

17. Fields of Flashing Light Quotes

He ran into the storm,
his overalls half-hooked over his union suit.
“Daddy!” I called. “You can’t stop dust.”

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:

21. Give Up On Wheat Quotes

But Ma says, “Can’t you see
what’s happening, Bayard?
The wheat’s not meant to be here.”

And Daddy says,
“What about those apple trees of yours, Pol?
You think they are?
Nothing needs more to drink than those two.
But you wouldn’t hear of leveling your apples,
would you?

Related Characters: Billie Jo’s Father (speaker), Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother (speaker)
Related Symbols: Apples
Page Number: 40-41
Explanation and Analysis:

24. World War Quotes

Daddy was just seventeen
when he fought in the
Great War off in France.

There’s not much he’s willing to say about those days, except about the poppies.
He remembers the poppies,
red on the graves of the dead.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father
Page Number: 44
Explanation and Analysis:

30. Dionne Quintuplets Quotes

I looked at Ma
so pregnant with one baby.
“Can you imagine five?” I said.
Ma lowered herself into a chair.
Tears dropping on her tight stretched belly,
she wept
just to think of it.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother, Elzire Dionne
Page Number: 57
Explanation and Analysis:

34. Nightmare Quotes

Daddy called to me. He asked me to bring water,
Ma was thirsty.
I brought up a pail of fire and Ma drank it. She had
given birth to a baby of flames. The baby
burned at her side.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother, Billie Jo’s Father, Franklin
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:

37. Devoured Quotes

But the grasshoppers ate every leaf,
they ate every piece of fruit.
Nothing left but a couple apple cores,
hanging from Ma’s trees.
I couldn’t tell her,
couldn’t bring myself to say
her apples were gone.
I never had a chance.

Ma died that day
giving birth to my brother.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Franklin, Billie Jo’s Mother
Related Symbols: Apples
Page Number: 68-69
Explanation and Analysis:

38. Blame Quotes

“Billie Jo threw the pail,”
they said. “An accident.”
they said.
Under their words a finger pointed.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father, Billie Jo’s Mother
Page Number: 71
Explanation and Analysis:

40. Roots Quotes

My father will stay, no matter what,
he’s stubborn as sod.
He and the land have a hold on each other.
But what about me?

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father
Page Number: 75
Explanation and Analysis:

49. Those Hands Quotes

My father used to say, why not put those hands to good use?
He doesn’t say anything about “those hands”
anymore.
Only Arley Wanderdale talks about them,
and how they could play piano again,
if I would only try.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father, Arley Wanderdale
Page Number: 89
Explanation and Analysis:

65. Birth Quotes

I think about Ma
and how that birth went.
I keep the kids out and listen behind me,
praying for the sound of a baby
crying into this world,
and not the silence
my brother brought with him.
And the cry comes
and I have to go away for a little while
and just walk off the feelings.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother, Franklin
Page Number: 123
Explanation and Analysis:

79. Heartsick Quotes

My father and I,
we can’t soothe each other.
I’m too young,
he’s too old,
and we don’t know how to talk anymore
if we ever did.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Mad Dog Craddock, Billie Jo’s Father
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:

80. Skin Quotes

My father has a raised spot
on the side of his nose
that never was there before
and won't go away.
And there’s another on his cheek and two more on his neck,
and I wonder
why the heck is he fooling around.
He knows what it is.
His father had those spots too.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father, Doc Rice
Page Number: 154
Explanation and Analysis:

82. Fire on the Rails Quotes

No one talks about fire
right to my face.
They can’t forget how fire changed my life.
But I hear them talking anyway.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother, Franklin
Page Number: 157
Explanation and Analysis:

84. Migrants Quotes

Don’t forget us, they say.
But there are so many leaving,
how can I remember them all?

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Livie Killian, Billie Jo’s Father
Page Number: 161
Explanation and Analysis:

86. The Visit Quotes

Mad Dog scooped a handful of dust,
like a boy in a sandpit.
He said, “I love this land,
no matter what.”

I looked at his hands.
They were scarless.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Mad Dog Craddock (speaker)
Page Number: 169
Explanation and Analysis:

89. Let Down Quotes

I thought maybe if my father ever went to Doc Rice
to do something about the spots on his skin,
Doc could check my hand too,
tell me what to do about them.

But my father isn’t going to Doc Rice,
and now
I think we’re both turning to dust.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father, Doc Rice
Page Number: 174-175
Explanation and Analysis:

97. Midnight Truth Quotes

My father’s digging his own grave,
he calls it a pond,
but I know what he’s up to.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father, Billie Jo’s Mother
Related Symbols: Apples
Page Number: 195
Explanation and Analysis:

98. Out of the Dust Quotes

How I slip under cover of darkness
inside a boxcar
and let the train carry me west.
Out of the dust.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Father, Livie Killian
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:

102. Met Quotes

My father is waiting at the station
and I call him
Daddy
for the first time
since Ma died,
and we walk home,
together,
talking.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Billie Jo’s Mother, Billie Jo’s Father
Page Number: 205
Explanation and Analysis:

104. The Other Woman Quotes

We both stared in wonder
at the pond my daddy made
and she said,
a hole like that says a lot about a man.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Louise, Mad Dog Craddock, Billie Jo’s Father, Arley Wanderdale
Page Number: 213
Explanation and Analysis:

111. Finding a Way Quotes

Sometimes, while I’m at the piano,
I catch her reflection in the mirror,
standing in the kitchen, soft-eyed, while Daddy
finishes chores,
and I stretch my fingers over the keys,
and I play.

Related Characters: Billie Jo (speaker), Louise, Billie Jo’s Mother, Billie Jo’s Father
Page Number: 227
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Out of the Dust LitChart as a printable PDF.
Out of the Dust PDF

Billie Jo Character Timeline in Out of the Dust

The timeline below shows where the character Billie Jo appears in Out of the Dust. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
1. Beginning: August 1920
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
As the crops ripened in the Oklahoma Panhandle, Billie Jo was born. Billie Jo’s mother gave birth to her on their kitchen floor because she... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
After Billie Jo was born, her parents tried having other children but could not. However, recently, Billie Jo’s... (full context)
2. Rabbit Battles
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
In January 1934, two men who live in Billie Jo ’s town (Joyce City), Mr. Noble and Mr. Romney, start a bet over who can... (full context)
3. Losing Livie
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s friend, Livie Killian, is moving away because her family is going to California. Billie... (full context)
4. Me and Mad Dog
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Arley Wanderdale, the music teacher at Billie Jo ’s school, asks her to play piano at a place called the Palace Theatre the... (full context)
5. Permission to Play
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo picks the right moment to ask her mother about playing piano at the Palace Theatre.... (full context)
6. On Stage
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo and Mad Dog play piano for the people at the Palace Theatre. Billie Jo feels... (full context)
7. Birthday for F.D.R.
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Because of her excellent performance at the Palace Theatre, Arley asks Billie Jo to perform at Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s birthday celebration. Billie Jo knows her mother will have... (full context)
8. Not Too Much To Ask
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
It has been three years since the last good harvest and everyone in Billie Jo ’s family is hungry. Even her pregnant mother is not getting enough to eat. However,... (full context)
9. Mr. Hardly’s Money Handling
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
It is Billie Jo ’s father’s birthday, and her mother wants to bake him a cake. She gets out... (full context)
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Mr. Hardly bags Billie Jo ’s groceries and, as he does so, Billie Jo lets her mind wander. On her... (full context)
10. Fifty Miles South of Home
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
In Amarillo, Texas, fifty miles south of where Billie Jo and her family live, a storm—possibly a tornado—wreaks havoc. It destroys windows, signs, and crops.... (full context)
11. Rules of Dining
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s mother has strict rules about how to set the table. Billie Jo must place... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Recently, Billie Jo heard from Livie Killian. Apparently, her family could not find work out west and are... (full context)
13. Dazzled
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo thinks about her mother’s talents. Although she does not think her mother is attractive, Billie... (full context)
14. Debts
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
In March of 1934, Billie Jo ’s father thinks about taking a loan out from the government so he can plant... (full context)
15. Foul as Maggoty Stew
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Arley asks Billie Jo to play piano for a show called Sunny of Sunnyside that will take her out... (full context)
16. State Tests
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo scores high on her state tests and rushes home to tell her mother. Her mother... (full context)
17. Fields of Flashing Light
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
One night in March, Billie Jo wakes up to wind and lightning. She senses a storm is coming and fears the... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Meanwhile, Billie Jo ’s mother wipes dust off of what she can and starts preparing coffee and biscuits.... (full context)
18. Tested by Dust
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
While Billie Jo is taking a test at school, the wind picks up and blows dust right through... (full context)
19. Banks
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s mother tells her that the family is going to get back all the money... (full context)
20. Beat Wheat
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
In April 1934, a county agent tells Billie Jo and her family that they have lost one-fourth of their wheat because of the weather.... (full context)
22. What I Don’t Know
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s teacher, Miss Freeland, is performing in a play called Madame Butterfly. Billie Jo has... (full context)
23. Apple Blossoms
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s mother has two apple trees that she has been taking care of since before... (full context)
25. Apples
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
It is May of 1934, and the apples are still green. Billie Jo knows they are too sour to eat at the moment. However, they will ripen around... (full context)
26. Dust and Rain
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
On a Sunday, the wind picks up and sprays dust everywhere. It gets all over Billie Jo ’s face and stings her eyes. When the dust stops blowing, it starts to rain.... (full context)
27. Harvest
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
...cents per bushel and manages to get eight bushels on land where he planted 20. Billie Jo thinks it will be miraculous if her father harvests a quarter of what he has... (full context)
28. On The Road With Arley
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Arley offers Billie Jo a job playing piano with his band, the Black Mesa Boys. He has connections in... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo travels around with Arley and his band, making money as she goes. The pay isn’t... (full context)
29. Hope in a Drizzle
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
...July 1934, the Panhandle gets a quarter inch of rain, which is great news for Billie Jo and her family. Not only does it help the plants, but it also puts Billie... (full context)
30. Dionne Quintuplets
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
...birth to five children at once. News travels all the way to the Panhandle, and Billie Jo asks her mother if she could imagine such a thing. Billie Jo’s mother says nothing—she... (full context)
31. Wild Boy of the Road
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
A random teenage boy stops by Billie Jo ’s house and offers to work for a meal. Billie Jo’s mother feeds the boy... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Before the boy leaves, Billie Jo ’s parents offer him a bath, a haircut, and a change of clothes. The boy... (full context)
32. The Accident
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s father leaves a bucket of kerosene near the stove, which her mother mistakes for... (full context)
33. Burns
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
At first, Billie Jo does not feel the pain from her burns. Doc Rice arrives and tends to Billie... (full context)
34. Nightmare
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo wakes up in the middle of the night, shaking from a dream she had. In... (full context)
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
As the dream continues, Billie Jo tries to play the piano, but it makes a terrible shrieking noise. Scared, she punches... (full context)
35. A Tent of Pain
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s mother is in poor condition. Nothing can touch her because, if it does, it... (full context)
37. Devoured
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Doc Rice sends Billie Jo to go get water on a hot day. While she is outside, a swarm of... (full context)
38. Blame
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s Aunt Ellis travels to Billie Jo’s house to collect Billie Jo’s new brother. She... (full context)
39. Birthday
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
In August of 1934, Billie Jo celebrates her birthday by walking to town where she can listen to Arley play music.... (full context)
40. Roots
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
President Roosevelt advises the country to plant trees to help end the drought. Billie Jo thinks his heart is in the right place, but he does not know what he... (full context)
41. The Empty Spaces
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s father has grown distant; Billie Jo feels like she barely knows him anymore. She... (full context)
42. The Hole
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo spends a lot of time in the kitchen, where everything hurts her hands. Meanwhile, her... (full context)
43. Kilauea
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
A volcano erupts in Kilauea, Hawaii. When Billie Jo hears about the event, it reminds her of a dust storm. (full context)
44. Boxes
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
In Billie Jo ’s closet, there are boxes containing all sorts of knick-knacks from her childhood. She always... (full context)
45. Night Bloomer
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
On a Saturday night in September, Mrs. Brown—one of Billie Jo ’s neighbors—invites people over to watch her cereus plant bloom. Billie Jo gets there at... (full context)
47. Hired Work
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s father gets a job digging holes for Wireless Power. He has practice digging holes... (full context)
49. Those Hands
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Billie Jo thinks about how last year, Coach Albright tried to get her to play basketball. She... (full context)
50. Real Snow
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
...falls. The snow is calm and sticks to the ground without blowing in anyone’s face. Billie Jo is happy, and she thinks her father will be, too. (full context)
51. Dance Revue
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Arley invites Billie Jo to play piano with him, his band, and Mad Dog. Billie Jo does not want... (full context)
52. Mad Dog’s Tale
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
...gave him the nickname when he was a child because he used to bite everything. Billie Jo goes home and asks her father to tell her Mad Dog’s real name. Her father... (full context)
53. Art Exhibit
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Billie Jo attends an art exhibit, which she has to pay 10 cents to attend. She uses... (full context)
54. State Tests Again
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Once again, Billie Jo and the rest of her grade do an excellent job on their state tests. Billie... (full context)
55. Christmas Dinner Without the Cranberry Sauce
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo has a Christmas dinner at school with Miss Freeland and two other motherless girls. The... (full context)
57. First Rain
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Billie Jo lies in bed on a Sunday night with a wet cloth on her face to... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Joe De La Flor spends the morning brushing mud off of his horse while Billie Jo ’s father helps a man named Mr. Kincannon pull his truck out of the mud.... (full context)
58. Haydon P. Nye
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
A man named Haydon P. Nye, whom Billie Jo knows from her time playing the piano, dies in the middle of January. Billie Jo ... (full context)
59. Scrubbing Up Dust
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo walks past the Crystal Hotel and sees a man on his knees, scraping mud. She... (full context)
60. Outlined By Dust
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo and her father stare at each other from across the dinner table. This is how... (full context)
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo wonders if her father looks at her to try to see some of her mother.... (full context)
61. The President’s Ball
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo and her father attend FDR’s Birthday Day and dance with each other as Arley and... (full context)
62. Lunch
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Everyone gets a huge meal at Billie Jo ’s school because the government sends in provisions and some of the local businesses send... (full context)
63. Guests
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
In February of 1935, Billie Jo goes to school and finds a family of five, including a pregnant woman, in her... (full context)
64. Family School
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s entire school does what they can to help out the homeless family. They eat... (full context)
65. Birth
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
One day, when Billie Jo arrives at school, Miss Freeland says she cannot come in because the woman is giving... (full context)
66. Time To Go
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
...weeks after the baby arrives, Buddy Williams and his family leave to go out west. Billie Jo doesn’t want the family to leave, especially the baby. (full context)
67. Something Sweet From Moonshine
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Two men who live near Billie Jo get arrested for cooking and selling moonshine. Sheriff Robertson arrests them and has their materials... (full context)
68. Dreams
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Every day after class, Billie Jo starts practicing the piano again. It hurts her hands, but she plays as much as... (full context)
69. The Competition
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Everyone from miles around comes to watch the music competition at the Palace Theatre. Billie Jo waits backstage with 16 other acts, all nervous and excited for the opportunity. The Hazel... (full context)
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
...the show starts, the acts vary in quality, though all of the musical acts shine. Billie Jo performs just past the show’s halfway mark and plays “Bye, Bye, Blackbird.” She gets off... (full context)
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
...show, some of the losers pout because they did not win. One girl even blames Billie Jo for her loss—saying she would have won if the judges had not taken pity on... (full context)
70. The Piano Player
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Arley invites Billie Jo to play with him during an upcoming show at the school. At first, Billie Jo... (full context)
71. No Good
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo plays with Arley for the school show and performs poorly. Although Arley would never say... (full context)
72. Snow
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
In March of 1935, Billie Jo wakes up to a significant amount of snow on the ground. She has a hard... (full context)
73. Night School
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s father considers going to night school so he will have a fallback plan in... (full context)
75. Dust Storm
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Billie Jo goes to a show at the Palace Theatre. When she leaves, she gets caught in... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Terrified for her father’s safety, Billie Jo stands on her porch and screams her father’s name, hoping he will hear her and... (full context)
77. Motherless
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo thinks about how life would be so much more bearable if her mother were still... (full context)
78. Following in His Steps
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
...wife dies of dust pneumonia two months after Mr. Nye dies. Despite the official cause, Billie Jo believes she died because life was too hard without her husband. Billie Jo thinks about... (full context)
79. Heartsick
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo wishes Mad Dog would court her but doesn’t think he will because he could get... (full context)
80. Skin
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo notices “a raised spot” on her father’s nose. Apparently, he has a few spots just... (full context)
81. Regrets
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo rarely sees her musical friends like Arley and Mad Dog. However, when she does, they... (full context)
82. Fire on the Rails
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
...1935 is an especially dry month in the Panhandle, which causes fires everywhere. One day, Billie Jo ’s school catches on fire, though luckily, the damage is not significant. It takes Billie... (full context)
83. The Mail Train
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo receives a letter from her Aunt Ellis asking if Billy Jo wants to come live... (full context)
84. Migrants
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
...“Don’t forget us” and promise they will be back. However, so many people leave that Billie Jo does not know how she is supposed to remember all of them. (full context)
85. Blankets of Black
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
...an intense dust storm picks up all around the area. It is the worst storm Billie Jo has ever seen. Her father pulls her out of the truck, and they seek shelter... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
After the storm, Billie Jo and her father go home, though some others continue on to the funeral. When they... (full context)
86. The Visit
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Mad Dog visits Billie Jo to see if she is okay after the storm. They talk for an hour, but... (full context)
87. Freak Show
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
...comes to Joyce City to take photographs in the aftermath of the latest dust storm. Billie Jo knows Kingsbury’s photos turned the Dionne family into a “freak show,” and she worries his... (full context)
88. Help From Uncle Sam
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s father takes a loan out from the government, which promises he will not have... (full context)
89. Let Down
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo gets invited to play piano at graduation. However, while on stage, she realizes she cannot... (full context)
91. The Rain’s Gift
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
The rain grows enough grass for the cattle to graze on. Billie Jo hears Joe De La Flor singing as he rides around on horseback. (full context)
92. Hope Smothered
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
A few days later, another dust storm occurs, crushing what little hope the rain provided. Billie Jo hears about opportunities for boys in the Civilian Conservation Corps. She wishes she was a... (full context)
93. Sunday Afternoon at the Amarillo Hotel
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
...to Mad Dog sing on the radio. Arley and his band perform alongside Mad Dog. Billie Jo is sad she is not there with them. However, everyone else is happy and proud... (full context)
94. Baby
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo asks her father if they can adopt the baby. However, he does not think it... (full context)
95. Old Bones
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Billie Jo thinks about how dinosaurs used to roam Cimarron County, where she lives. She imagines what... (full context)
96. The Dream
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo dreams about how her piano is like her mother because it is always by her... (full context)
97. Midnight Truth
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo thinks about how bitter she has become because of her circumstances. She is depressed about... (full context)
98. Out of the Dust
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo gets out of bed in the middle of the night, takes a few biscuits and... (full context)
99. Gone West
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
The train ride is difficult. Billie Jo burns up in the desert and freezes in the mountains. Along the way, she spots... (full context)
100. Something Lost, Something Gained
Poverty, Charity, and Community Theme Icon
A smelly and grimy man climbs onto Billie Jo ’s train car. He asks her about herself and then shows her a photograph of... (full context)
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
...he left home because he lost his land and could not feed his family. Like Billie Jo ’s father, the man could not get his crops to grow. In response, Billie Jo... (full context)
Coming of Age Theme Icon
When Billie Jo wakes up, the man and the remaining biscuits are missing. In their place is the... (full context)
101. Homeward Bound
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
On her way home, Billie Jo thinks about how leaving was worse than staying because of how lonely life became. She... (full context)
102. Met
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo ’s father is waiting for her when her train arrives. When Billie Jo sees him,... (full context)
103. Cut It Deep
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo and her father go to see Doc Rice. Doc Rice chastises Billie Jo’s father for... (full context)
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
When Billie Jo and her father return home from Doc Rice’s, they go through what remains of Billie... (full context)
104. The Other Woman
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
A woman named Louise cooks dinner for Billie Jo and her father. Apparently, Louise stayed with Billie Jo’s father during the few days she... (full context)
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
During the walk, Billie Jo asks her father if he still wants her to go live with Aunt Ellis. Her... (full context)
105. Not Everywhere
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo and her father walk to Billie Jo’s mother’s grave. Louise wanted to join them, but... (full context)
106. My Life, or What I Told Louise After the Tenth Time She Came to Dinner
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo tells Louise that although she looks like her father, she has her mother’s hands—“piano hands.”... (full context)
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Louise listens to Billie Jo calmly, meeting her gaze with confidence. Billie Jo continues discussing her life. She talks about... (full context)
107. November Dust
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
...November 1935, the wheat grows well even though there are still some dust storms. Meanwhile, Billie Jo ’s father’s pond is thriving and providing nutrients for her mother’s apple trees. Billie Jo... (full context)
108. Thanksgiving List
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo lists the things she is thankful for, including the continued good weather, Louise’s cooking, her... (full context)
109. Music
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Billie Jo starts refamiliarizing herself with music. In the process, she realizes now that she never should... (full context)
110. Teamwork
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Whenever Louise comes over for dinner, she and Billie Jo go on a walk together after they eat while Billie Jo’s father does the dishes.... (full context)
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Billie Jo recalls the Thanksgiving she spent with Louise and her father. To be respectful, Louise did... (full context)
111. Finding a Way
Nature, Survival, and the Dust Bowl Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
In December of 1935, Billie Jo , her father, and Louise are all doing their best to keep moving forward. Conditions... (full context)
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Family and Forgiveness Theme Icon
Louise is a great help to Billie Jo and her father, and Billie Jo hopes that she will soon move in with them.... (full context)