veanz
hath no fury
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2003
- Messages
- 521
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
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Its officially a favourite book of mine. 2 thumbs up.
Its amazing how McCourt remembers and captures his outlook as a child. (I wish i could - and im only 18) Although many of Frank's circumstances are overhwelmingly desperate, the simplicity of the writing - the innoncence, honesty, naivete - compensates. So it was weird in the sense that i did not no whether to laugh outloud or cry. But i did smile anyway and got weird looks from other train passengers. Dont you just hate that?
Its pretty easy reading because its a memoir of a childhood, there is alot of irish slang which is funny (as are the euphemisms of 'excitement') and no quotation marks so you immediately adopt the other persona, effective in the sense you immediately see what Frank pinpoints.
Makes you think twice about childhood and adulthood.
Anyone who's read it, i'd love to hear about what you thought of it, and without revealing too much, what you thought of the ending.
Its amazing how McCourt remembers and captures his outlook as a child. (I wish i could - and im only 18) Although many of Frank's circumstances are overhwelmingly desperate, the simplicity of the writing - the innoncence, honesty, naivete - compensates. So it was weird in the sense that i did not no whether to laugh outloud or cry. But i did smile anyway and got weird looks from other train passengers. Dont you just hate that?
Its pretty easy reading because its a memoir of a childhood, there is alot of irish slang which is funny (as are the euphemisms of 'excitement') and no quotation marks so you immediately adopt the other persona, effective in the sense you immediately see what Frank pinpoints.
Makes you think twice about childhood and adulthood.
Anyone who's read it, i'd love to hear about what you thought of it, and without revealing too much, what you thought of the ending.