
Presley sets out from the Broderson ranch on a scorching September day, cycling through the cracked, dust‑laden lanes of the San Joaquin Valley. The relentless heat and the distant wail of a railroad whistle frame a landscape where farms are failing and the soil is barely holding on. As he pushes his bicycle past weather‑worn roads, his thoughts drift toward a promised dinner in Guadalajara, a brief escape from the endless labor of harvest season.
Along the way he stops at a towering wooden water tank, its freshly painted advertisements a bright splash in the barren plain. There he encounters Hooven—nicknamed “Bismarck”—a talkative German tenant who insists on a quick word, hinting at the tangled web of land deals, mortgages, and the looming power of the railroads. Their brief exchange opens a window onto the tensions between hard‑working ranch hands and the larger forces reshaping California’s agrarian life.
Language
en
Duration
~19 hours (1112K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by John Hamm, and David Widger
Release date
2008-07-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1870–1902
A major early voice of American naturalism, he wrote vivid, often unsettling fiction about greed, power, and the forces that shape ordinary lives. Though he died at just 32, his novels helped define a tougher, more modern kind of realism in American literature.
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