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America the brutal
BY FRANK McCOURT
SCRIBNER
NONFICTION
368 PAGES
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Aug. 31, 1999 |
"Angela's Ashes" is a fable testifying to the redemptive powers of two things turn-
Also Today The suffering Irish For me -- and, I imagine, for thousands of other children of immigrants -- it was impossible to read "Angela's Ashes" with dispassion. My own father was growing up poor in Dublin during the same years McCourt was growing up poor in Limerick, and I identify the two so strongly that I suspect my critical judgment of McCourt's work is compromised even as my feeling for it is enriched. We all look for things that speak to us personally in whatever we read, but in this case the histories are uncannily similar. Both were born to immigrant families in New York (just three years apart) and then sent "home" to Ireland as young children after their families' fortunes turned sour in the Depression. Later, both returned to America as teenagers, worked their way through college, and went on to teaching and writing careers (McCourt in the New York City schools, my father at the University of California). I don't think my great-grandmother's household was nearly as desperate as the McCourts', but it wasn't a picnic either. Around the time young Frankie was out hunting for coal on the docks, my father was gathering mussels along the rocky seafront of Clontarf, on Dublin's north side, so his grandmother could cook them in buttermilk for the family's dinner. (Anytime we ate in a restaurant that served mussels, my dad would tell this story again, by way of explaining that he'd never pay for the damn things in his life.) In both families, the stories vary, "Rashomon" style, depending on who is doing the telling. My father remembered his Irish childhood as years of cold, hunger, loneliness and want. His aunts and cousins remember a loving, almost genteel household, straitened by circumstance, in which my father was the pampered prodigy.
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