Angela's Ashes: A Memoir by Frank McCourt

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(Paperback)

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  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
  • Pub. Date: May 1999
  • ISBN-13: 9780684842677
  • Sales Rank: 1,149
  • 368pp
 
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Synopsis

Sometimes it's worth the wait. Having waited 40 years to tell his story, Frank McCourt doesn't pull any punches in his story of growing up dirt poor in Limerick, Ireland. Having emigrated to America, McCourt's family returns to Ireland after his sister dies in Brooklyn. It is there that things turn from bad to worse.

It is McCourt's contention that there is nothing worse than Irish Catholic poverty, and his book would seem to bear it out: his family moves to a row house in Limerick that is located next to the street's lavatory. However, the book is written in a lyrical style from the point of view of Frank McCourt as a boy, and it is still filled with the whimsy of growing up and the natural humor of its author.

While the book is often angry (at the Church, at his father, at his poverty, at his mother), it is also filled with forgiveness without bitterness.Covering the ages spanning three to 19, Angela's Ashes is the story of Frank McCourt's struggle to escape from poverty and a tale of Ireland still seemingly in the dark ages. Barred from the good schools because of his class, teeth falling out from malnutrition, and facing life with a shiftless alcoholic father, McCourt nevertheless survives on his wits and manages to return to America to start his life over. Again. It is a triumph of both the art of memoir writing and the author's spirit.

Linnea Lannon - Detroit Free Press

Every once in a while, a lucky reader comes across a book that makes an indelible impression, a book you immediately want to share with everyone around you....Frank McCourt's life, and his searing telling of it, reveal all we need to know about being human.

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Biography

Frank McCourt was born in 1930 in Brooklyn, New York, to Irish immigrant parents, grew up in Limerick, Ireland, and returned to America in 1949. For thirty years he taught in New York City high schools. His first book, Angela's Ashes, won the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award and the L.A. Times Book Award. In 2006, he won the prestigious Ellis Island Family Heritage Award for Exemplary Service in the Field of the Arts and the United Federation of Teachers John Dewey Award for Excellence in Education. He lives with his wife, Ellen, in New York and Connecticut.

Customer Reviews

Some people have it worse off...by Anonymous

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May 21, 2009: Angela's Ashes is truly a classic. I really enjoyed reading this book about someone else's life. It really gave me a look into a perspective that I wouldn't have otherwise thought of. Growing up in Ireland, living in poverty, and having a drunk for a father really seems to shape Frankie McCourt into a man; a man very unlike his father and being like that makes even his Aunt Aggie happy. Schooling isn't for everyone and Frank finds that out going through his life. Work is much more important than school because that's what brings home the money for bread, sugar, and whatever else that doesn't cost that much. I couldn't understand how a family could go through that much loss and heartache over dead family members and still give thanks to the Virgin Mary. Especially the young and confused Frankie who seems to be told that everything he does and says is a sin and that he needs to go to confession to be forgiven. It was nice to read that as he got older things got better and Frank did get to go back to America where he was born. I'm excited to read McCourt's next book entitled 'Tis.

one of a kind, and one in a millionby Anonymous

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April 16, 2009: I think that it is a really good book. It is one of a kind, and that everyone should read it. The book tells of a boy and his family moving from place to place. And how they work through the troubled times with being poor, and how he is dealing with the hard times. they also show how the Irish families are torward the other family members other than there own family.


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