Novels •
John Steinbeck's 1939 novel
The Grapes of Wrath won the
Pulitzer Prize for its characterization of the Okie lifestyle and journey to California. • In
James Blish's
Cities in Flight science fiction series, the term "Okie" was applied in a similar context to entire cities that, thanks to an anti-gravity device, take flight to the stars in order to escape an economic collapse on Earth. Working as a migrant labor force, these cities act as cultural pollinators, spreading technology and knowledge throughout the expanding human civilization. The later novels focus on the travels of
New York City as one such Okie city, though there are many others. • In the novel
On the Road by
Jack Kerouac – written between 1948 and 1949, although not published until 1957 – the term appears to refer to some of the people the main character, a New York author, meets in one of his trips around the United States. • In the novel
Paint it Black by
Janet Fitch, the protagonist (an LA punk-rocker in the early 1980s) thinks of herself and her family as "Okies." •
Frank Bergon's 2011 novel ''Jesse's Ghost'' draws attention to today's sons and daughters of the California Okies portrayed in
Steinbeck's
The Grapes of Wrath. •
Kristin Hannah's 2021 novel
The Four Winds portrays the life, struggle and survival of a single mother and her two children during the days following the Great depression (1929) and Dust Bowls. She and people like her are often termed as
Okies by the Californian natives. •
Sanora Babb's 2004 novel
Whose Names Are Unknown is based on the author's first-hand experience. The novel was originally scheduled to be published in 1939, but publication was shelved when Steinbeck's
The Grapes of Wrath came out. The title is taken from a legal eviction notice.
Music •
April The 14th Part I & Ruination day Part II "And the Okies fled. And the great emancipater" (Time-The Revelator – Gillian Welch.
Welch/Rawlings (2001). •
California Okie –
Buck Owens (1976). •
Dear Okie – Doye O’Dell/Rudy Sooter (1948) –
"Dear Okie, if you see Arkie, tell ’im Tex’s got a job for him out in Californy." •
Israelites & Okies -- The Lost Dogs (from the 2010 album
Old Angel). •
Lonesome Okie Goin’ Home –
Merl Lindsay and the Oklahoma Night Riders (1947). •
Oakie Boogie – Jack Guthrie and His Oklahomans (1947) – considered by many to be the first Rock & Roll song. •
Okanagan Okie – Stompin' Tom Connors. •
Okie –
J. J. Cale (1974). •
Okie From Muskogee –
Merle Haggard (from the 1969
album of the same name). • "Okie" – a parody of the above by
Patrick Sky from his 1973 album
Songs that made America Famous. •
Okie Skies – The Bays Brothers (2004). •
Okies in California – Doye O'Dell (1949). •
Oklahoma Swing-by Reba McEntire and Vince Gill (1990). • ''Ramblin' Okie'' – Terry Fell. •
Southeast Texas Girl –
Jeremy Castle (2021) –
"I’m as Okie as a rose rock, native as the red fern grows." Poetry • Cahill, Charlie.
Point Blank Poetry: Okie Country Cowboy Poems. Midwest City, OK: CF Cahill, 1991. LoC Control Number: 92179243 • Harrison, Pamela.
Okie Chronicles. Cincinnati: David Robert Books, 2005. • McDaniel, Wilma Elizabeth. California Okie
Poet Laureate. All works. • Rose, Dorothy.
Dustbowl Okie Exodus. Seven Buffaloes Press, 1987.
Film •
Jack Nicholson's character in
Chinatown derisively refers to a farmhand as an Okie in a scene where he is confronted for trespassing in an orange grove
Other fiction • Charles, Henry P.
That dumbest Okie, and other short stories: Oklahoma! "The land of honest men and slender women." Wetzel, c1952. • Cuelho, Artie, Jr. ''At the Rainbow's End: A Dustbowl Collection of Prose and Poetry of the Okie Migration to the San Joaquin Valley''. Big Timber, Montana: Seven Buffaloes Press, 1982. • Haslam, Gerald.
Okies: Selected Stories. Santa Barbara, California: Peregrine Smith, Inc, 1975. • Hudson, Lois Phillips.
Reapers of the Dust. Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1984. ==See also==