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53 pages 1 hour read

Cindy Baldwin

Where The Watermelons Grow

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2018

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Symbols & Motifs

The Weather

Content Warning: This section contains descriptions of mental illness and children in emotional distress.

The weather is an important motif throughout the story, embodying The Impact of Mental Illness on Family, as the severe drought on the farm parallels the suffering the family deals with as a result of Mama’s illness. The weather is introduced on the first page of the novel as being “too hot to sleep—too hot to do anything but lie there” (1). Alongside the introduction of the unbearably hot weather is the introduction of Mama’s illness, as Della finds Mama acting uncharacteristically in the kitchen for the first time.

As Mama’s illness gets worse, Daddy expresses he “can practically hear the crops drying up and dying out there in the fields” (49). With Mama’s illness worsening, the state of the family and the farm also worsens. Della begins thinking about rain. As Della tries and fails to help Mama with her illness, she narrates, “Right then, I didn’t know if Daddy or I was wishing harder for one of those big, beautiful rainstorms” (89).

The weather motif continues when things begin to shift for Mama and the family. When Della runs away from home, she hears the first indications of a storm in the distance.

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