Wow. This short but powerful story reads like a cross between a Steinbeck novel of social commentary and a Coen brothers black comedy/tragedy film. In it, we get a raw and disturbing view into a family and small farming culture that has been all but destroyed by those holding the money and the power; the banking industry, evangelical religion, corporate farming, and the industrial revolution, have literally left these desperately poor people in the dust. All that is left is a destitution so deep and irreversible that it has reduced the family and surrounding community to a barely human condition, dealing with hunger, lust, superstition, and fear. Yet to their last breath, they are able to hang on to their dream of farming and their love of the land. This story is even more disturbing and sad in that we can still see this pattern of money, religion, and power controlling and crushing the poor in spirit playing out in today's society and culture. One would have hoped that this country could have made more progress toward justice and equality in the last 100 years. So it goes.