In the story, the Talmadge’s are the traditional, established family in the community. While many of the characters around them were able to progress during this transitional time, the Talmadge’s were slow to accept these changes. Daughtry explained, “The Talmadge’s were big landowners. They had been there all their life. Their ancestors had compiled about 1,800 acres… They loved the way their life was, they didn’t want it to change so they had sharecroppers and they also had a bank. The bank was not changing also… the time came when they should’ve started doing other things like credit cards, loaning money on banks, loaning money on cars… you can see the Talmadge family begin to not accept the changes that were taking place and they were suffering because of it.”
Talmadge Farm has often been described as a love letter to the South. According to Daughtry, “In spite of what the South has done and is doing, everybody loves the South. The South has a charm about it and this book talks about the good parts of the South and how good the people are and what the South has meant to so many of us… It’s a love story in many respects.”
Writing a chapter can take you on a rabbit hunt that you won’t expect, but I would bring it back, and I did have an outline of basically what I wanted to do, what I wanted to write.”
Let us not forget that the cultivation of the earth is the most important labor of man. When tillage begins, other arts will follow. The farmers, therefore, are the founders of civilization.”
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