Chicks On Lit discussion

This topic is about
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Archive 08-19 GR Discussions
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CC- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

http://www.epubbud.com/read.php?g=KLK...
(crossing my fingers the link works)



@Collin -- thank you for that wonderful link to Betty Smith's comments for the special edition. Apparently I am not the only one who thinks Francie's story is my own...



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0038190/
I think it would make a great mini-series with the right cast and director.

My in person book group read A Tree Griws in Brooklyn and then I passed around the movie!

Nancy, I'll have to check it out when I am done. I can't watch a movie until I finish the book.

I read this book in high school. Will definitely join in and read it again.


Thanks again, Collin for linking the author's note. I enjoyed the insight it gave me on the author.
Here is a brief Bio:
Born on December 15, 1896 in Brooklyn, New York to German immigrants, she grew up poor in Williamsburg, Brooklyn and attended Girl's High School.[1] These experiences served as the framework to her first novel, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1943).
After marrying George H. E. Smith, a fellow Brooklynite, she moved with him to Ann Arbor, Michigan, where he pursued a law degree at the University of Michigan. At this time, she gave birth to two girls and waited until they were in school so she could complete her higher education. Although Smith had not finished high school, the university allowed her to enroll in classes. There she honed her skills in journalism, literature, writing, and drama, winning a prestigious Avery Hopwood Award. She was a student in the classes of Professor Kenneth Thorpe Rowe.
In 1938 she divorced her husband and moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina. There she married Joseph Jones in 1943, the same year in which A Tree Grows in Brooklyn was published. She teamed with George Abbott to write the book for the 1951 musical adaptation of the same name. Throughout her life, Smith worked as a dramatist, receiving many awards and fellowships including the Rockefeller Fellowship and the Dramatists Guild Fellowship for her work in drama. Her other novels include Tomorrow Will Be Better (1947), Maggie-Now (1958) and Joy in the Morning (1963).
On January 17, 1972, she died from pneumonia in Shelton, Connecticut, at the age of 75.
In addition, I found this website to have a lot of interesting information on it:
http://web.njit.edu/~cjohnson/tree/bi...



I found her likeable from the beginning. Her goal to work hard, save money and buy every single book she liked really grabbed me.


My Mom told me she read it in high school. That would have been i the early 50's which I found interesting. Anybody else assigned this book in school?
I am also enjoying this book. Honestly, I had not really even heard of the book before, and really didn't know what it was even going to be about. It was never assigned in any of my school classes, and somehow never made it onto my reading radar.
I also love the character of Francie, and love her love of books. This is a very descriptive story, and I love how I feel like I can really see what is happening, feel what is going on.
Thank you to all the ladies who suggested this as our next classic club read. :o)
I also love the character of Francie, and love her love of books. This is a very descriptive story, and I love how I feel like I can really see what is happening, feel what is going on.
Thank you to all the ladies who suggested this as our next classic club read. :o)

Sad though, I have probably had this book on my shelf for about 10 years and left it unread. I am happy to finally get to it.
I love the character of Francie too and I loved the library scene, though I found it sad that the librarian was so unaware that she asked for a book each week.



"They were bums and they were hungry and they didn't have a talent for song-making. All they had in the world was the nerve to stand in a backyard with cap in hand and sing loudly. The sad thing was in the knowing that all their nerve would get them nowhere and they were lost as all people in Brooklyn seem lost when the day is nearly over and even though the sun is still bright, it is thing and doesn't give you warmth when it shines on you,"(115).
It really speaks to the lack of hope.

I would like to hear impressions so far, favorite lines, and anything that has stood out to you.
I was wondering what you think about the reasons the Nolans decide to move each time?
What do you think about the varying impressions of Sissy? What are your thoughts on her?
Just a few things to get us started :)



I have containers to hold loose change in two closets. My girls love saving their change too.

I don't have the book in front of me, but I think my favorite passage so far is where Katie is talking to her neighbors about the tree and how if you value it and treat it well, it can be a thing of beauty.


My favourite character is Sissy also. She is authentic and it is hard to resist her authenticity. I feel terribly sorry for her...because she is so nice you want her to be happy. I think she is superstitious and this leads to some trouble for her. I also don't understand the men she is with. The firemen doesn't seem so happy about giving her up, having an affair with her well after, but yet the book says he was. Why are the men in this book portrayed as unsatisfied all the time?

That part when Francie says she is like all the books she has read--I felt a little like a little bit of all the characters in this book. I guess that is a sign of great storytelling.


The description of her love of dill pickles hit home for me -- throughout my childhood, when I went to the grocery store with my mom I was allowed one treat... most kids might pick a candy bar (and AbbaDabbas were tempting! :), but I always chose those great big fat gorgeous kosher dill pickles wrapped all alone in their pickle juicey sealed plastic bags. I could make one last all day.
In retrospect, I wonder if the craving for dill pickles didn't have something to do with an imbalanced diet -- my parents grew up in farm country, and bread/biscuits & gravy, potatoes, carbs carbs carbs were the norm in our family -- too much carb & alkaline producing foods? In the kind of poverty experienced by Francie's family, filler foods (carbs) often had to take the place of fruit, vegies, and protein.

My grandma used to take me to get a piece of beef jerky. And when I was little I had a fascination with limes and lemons...my great grandma would say after my mom would make me put it back, " at least the girl can have a lemon." She would put it back in the cart. When we got home she would pour tea/and or coffee and cut up the lemon for me. This reminds me of Katie letting Francie have the coffee.
We did not have money back then...and your thoughts on the possible reasons I also would choose those type of things over candy are interesting and most definitely probable. I had never thought of that before.


I'm really curious about what's going the happen to Johnny.
Beginning of chapter 8
But they were all dead before they were thirty-five -- all dead, and of the four, only Johnny left children.
And the last sentence of this section
Francie didn't notice that he said my last home instead of our last home. .
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February 26th - Discuss Books 4 and 5 (Chapters 43 - 56)