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Frank McCourt
Visits Milton |
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Date Posted:
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October 23, 2001
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Milton students found writer
Frank McCourt to be a natural storyteller, when he spoke with them
on Tuesday morning, October 23. Mr. McCourt's rich sense of humor
served him well during his early morning encounter with hundreds
of Milton students. Regaling students with his descriptors of American
teenagers, Frank based his assessment of teenage patterns and behaviors
on his own daughter's passage through her teenage years. Mr. McCourt
countered his observations of American teens in their high schools,
with his own school experience in Ireland in the 1940s where he
and his brothers approached the school day with the sense of impending
terror. Asking questions, or even talking were not permitted. "We
were not educated," Mr. McCourt claimed, "we were conditioned."
McCourt subtly reminded students of their own entitlement when he
told them that he and his brothers could not imagine not eating
food they were given, much less dieting, or that he used old rolls
of wallpaper when he wrote stories as a child, paper being completely
unavailable to him. The fact that he had always wanted to write,
and had persisted with great success in reaching that
goal, was very moving to Milton students.
Frank McCourt`s first book,
Angela`s Ashes won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book
Award; it has sold tens of millions of copies worldwide. His second
book 'Tis starts off where Angela's Ashes left off
with his life in the United States, especially his years as a New
York City school teacher.
McCourt was born in 1931
in Brooklyn, New York, to Irish immigrant parents; grew up in Limerick,
Ireland, and returned to America in 1949. For 30 years he taught
in various New York City high schools, including Stuyvesant High
School, and in city colleges. He lives with his wife, Ellen, in
New York City and Connecticut.

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