I Survived the Dust Bowl, 1935 (I Survived #25)

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Age Range
8+
Release Date
December 02, 2025
ISBN
978-1338891836
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When a drought turns the farmland of the Texas Panhandle into a dry wasteland, eleven-year-old Ray’s world begins to crumble. Fierce dust storms blacken the sky and destroy everything in their path.

Ray and his best friend, Dolly, do their chores and go to school. But there’s nothing they can do to save their struggling town or the thousands of people who are sick from the filthy air.

Then Ray learns a family secret. He sets out to help his parents . . . and ends up caught in the most vicious dust storm of them all. Will Ray make it through? Will he ever see his parents again?

Includes a section of nonfiction back matter with more facts and photos about the real-life event.

Editor review

1 review
Another great surivival adventure
(Updated: June 19, 2026)
Overall rating
 
3.8
Plot
 
4.0
Characters
 
4.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
3.0
Ray lives on a farm in the Texas Panhandle in 1935, during the Great Depression. His best friend, Dolly, frequently accompanies him on his adventures, but things are changing in their small town. The bakery where the two occasionally buy cookies has closed, and many of their classmates in their one room school house have moved to California to pursue better opportunities. Still, there are some boys who show up in the two, having ridden on freight trains away from their own homes. When dust storms arise, Ray and Dolly know to seek shelter, but these storms seem to be becoming more frequent, and the two get caught in town, at school, and at home, where they have to ride out the dust and spend hours cleaning up afterwards. At one point, Ray's father ventures out to check on the chickens, and it is a tense time until he returns. Even with all of the precautions like Vaseline to line their nostrils, wet cloths and even surplus WWI era gas masks to block particulates, and protocols for sheltering in place, many people, including Dolly's brother Skippy, develop "dust pneumonia" and have trouble breathing. When Dolly's family leaves for California and Ray's family is in danger of losing their farm to the bank, Ray decides to strike out on his own, but runs into complications. There is historical information as well as period photographs at the end of the book.
Good Points
As we approach the 100th anniversary of the 1929 stock market crash, I am glad to see new books on the Great Depression such as Colman's Where Only Storms Grow and Ruiz-Flores' The Pecan Sheller. The books written shortly after this era don't delve as much into the health implications of the dust storms, or the environmental issues that led to the soil erosion and subsequent dust storms. Both of these issues interest my students.

While there were many topics that are frequently covered, like children riding the rails, farms being foreclosed, and the suffocating terror of being caught in a storm. I did learn some new and surprising things, such as the fact that World War I surplus gas masks were distributed to children so that they could breathe somewhat more freely, and the odd occurrence of rain clouds meeting with dust clouds and producing showers of MUD!

The best part of the I Survived books are the historical back matter, which includes period photos and much discussion of a variety of topics. I would have avidly saved my allowance to purchase these titles in elementary school! I always encourage students to further their investigations with nonfiction titles, which in this case would include Brown's The Great American Dust Bowl and Sandler's Picturing a Nation.
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