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ANGELA'S ASHES

ANGELA'S ASHES

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $17.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: There has to be a sequel!
Review: Like many others, I was totally immersed in Frank McCourt's book from start to finish - and it's the finish that bothered me. So I have to ask - is there a sequel still inside his head? If so, please - and may I speak for many others - put it down and let us read it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best book I have had the privilege to read in years.
Review: I have just listened to Angela's Ashes for the third time.What a heart wrenching story of the McCourt family so well expressed by the author himself with his Irish accent the songs he sings. If anyone thinks their own childhood suffered, then read the story of the McCourt family's desperation and you will, like myself, feel you were privileged. What a magnificent book. I have recommended it to all my friends and am anxiously awaiting the sequel to this tragic but beautiful story.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Impressed but Not Convinced
Review: I read Angela's Ashes at the behest of my sister who raved until I could resist no more. She sent it to me and there it sat; naturally I picked it up and was drawn into the beautiful writing and entertaining stories - as has been every person I know who has read it. It was a very good read.

However, when I reflected on the book I started to feel Mr. McCourt had overly romanticized a grueling and cruel childhood. I began to recall the tone and flavor of Roddy Doyle's books "Paddy Clarke- Ha Ha Ha" and "The Woman who Walked into Doors", two novels which deal with a similar subject matter. Those books went so much deeper to reveal the heavy oppression and despair of poverty in Catholic Ireland. I would highly recommend both books to anyone who wants a more realistic and truthful portrayal of the Irish Catholic experience.

I find it hard to believe that a childhood such as that told by Mr. McCourt can be both a revealed truth and so completely anecdotal and humorous. There is not expressed the pain in the child that I firmly believe must be there. Surely there resides in him a core of damage and a modicum of bitterness that, unexplored and unrevealed, will not go away.

It reminds me of a Hollywood movie with a happy ending. It makes one feel good, but is it true? I have read many reviews of this book and have not heard this criticism raised. I wonder if anyone else feels as I do about the book.

Comments?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Depressing, funny, compelling, well written
Review: A dark story with flashes of humor. Poverty and sub-human conditions are described in detail, but Irish humor comes through the darkness. A wonderful tribute to a mother who tried. I'm going to read it again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lyrical, moving, generous
Review: This biography is riveting in its language, characterizations, and underlying generosity . How could someone experience such poverty and not be filled with resentment and hate? It's a tribute to the resilience of McCourt's spirit. Read it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Here's a much well deserved Pulitzer winner
Review: Anyone who cares about fine writing should read this book It's a much well deserved winner of the Pulitzer prize for biography. The book is totally refreshing, with a style I hadn't seen in any other book. McCourt is very original, creative and entertaining.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 'Tis a great and subversive book
Review: Like all great literature, Angela's Ashes is about more than it seems. Yes, it is about Ireland, poverty, alcoholism, cynical, arrogant priests, the myth of a golden America, sexually coming of age. But what it is essentially and magnificently about is the glory of words, language, stories, the stuff we all carry in our minds to make life bearable. The stories, the language, subvert the best (and worst) intentions of a benighted church and aristrocracy (in the background but always there) to keep the poor and humble docile, stupid and accepting of their miserable lot on earth in hope of salvation in the bye and bye. A brilliant, life-affirming work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Amazing Life Lesson
Review: Angela's Ashes brings you laughter and an understanding of true poverty. The most amazing thing about this work is the absence of hatred. Could you live year after year near starvation, loose people you love to alcoholism, to oppression and not hate? To not only refuse hatred but to understand that your mind is your own to control, that your fate is in your own hands! These three things make a survivor and a great book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The most wonderful book I have ever read.
Review: Angela's Ashes : A Memoir by Frank McCourt can bring about every type of emotion a reader can possible feel while reading this wonderful book. I laughed, I cried, I felt the pain of Frank McCourt's life in Limerick, Ireland. I have personally recommended this book to just about everyone I know. I have included Angela's Ashes on a reading list for the genealogical course I teach and I have requested our small college library to add the book to our holdings. I have purchased many copies to give away and I have found that all those whom I have talked into reading this fine memoir have also found it to be one of the best books they have read. Many have purchased their own book to keep. I am hoping and waiting for a sequel and a movie!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stunning!
Review: Frank McCourt's memoir of a life of poverty ranges from New York to the streets of Limerick Ireland. His father "being from the North" has the Ireland desease, alcoholism. None the less Frankie and his kid brothers grow up piously and express some hilarious moments through eyes of a child. Thank-you Mr. McCourt for writing an excellent memoir in a beautiful way! I can't wait for the follow up "'Tis" coming in 1999.


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