Out of the Dust
- Genre: Fiction; middle-grade historical
- Originally Published: 1997
- Reading Level/Interest: Lexile NP; grades 4-7
- Structure/Length: 8 parts; approx. 227 pages; approx. 2 hours, 9 minutes on audio
- Protagonist/Central Conflict: Billie Jo’s life turns upside down after a terrible accident kills her mother and disfigures her own hands. As her father becomes distant, she runs away from home, where she learns lessons that lead her back to where she belongs.
- Potential Sensitivity Issues: Death of a parent and sibling; explicit descriptions of burns; disfigurement; use of the term “crippled” to describe an injured person
Karen Hesse, Author
- Bio: Born in 1952 in Baltimore, Maryland; American author of books for children and young adults; studied math at Towson State College; attended University of Maryland, earning a degree in English and a double minor in psychology and anthropology; lives with her husband in Brattleboro, Vermont
- Other Works: Letters from Rifka (1992); Phoenix Rising (1994); The Music of Dolphins (1996); Witness (2001); My Thumb (2016)
- Awards: Newbery Medal (1998); Scott O’Dell Award (1998); ALA Best Books for Young Adults (1998); Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children’s Book Award nominee (1999)
CENTRAL THEMES connected and noted throughout this Teaching Unit:
- Finding Hope Amidst Tragedy
- Resilience of the Human Spirit
- The Impact of Ignorance on Environment and Society
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Unit, students will:
- Gain an understanding of the historical contexts surrounding the Great Depression that impact Billie Jo’s life.
- Read paired texts and other brief resources to make connections via the text’s themes of Finding Hope Amidst Tragedy, Resilience of the Human Spirit, and The Impact of Ignorance on Environment and Society.
- Analyze and evaluate the plot and character details to draw conclusions in structured essays regarding the environment as a character, literary elements of the text, and other topics.