If you have a class of 35 children, and they’re all smiling, and there’s one little bastard, and he’s just staring at you as if to say ‘Show me’, then he’s the one you think about going home on the train. Frank McCourt Read Quote
Sure, I went through my ‘J’accuse’ phase. I was so angry for so long, I could hardly have a conversation without getting into an argument. And it was only when I felt I could finally distance myself from my past that I began to write about what happened – not just to me, but to lots of young people. I think my story is a cautionary tale. Frank McCourt Read Quote
I think that’s why you see so many Americans in Dublin look so sad: they are looking for the door through which they can begin to understand this place. I tell them, ‘Go to the races.’ I think it’s the best place to start understanding the Irish. Frank McCourt Read Quote
On the last day of my teaching career, I was sitting in my apartment, having a glass of wine, thinking I’m glad I did it, that I had been somehow useful, that I had learned something. Frank McCourt Read Quote
You’re beginning to hear the tale of the common man and woman rather than the traditional memoir about the generals who just finished the war or the politicians who just rendered glorious service to the country. Frank McCourt Read Quote
Something happened when the memoirs of so-called ordinary people, like myself, suddenly hit the bestseller list. Frank McCourt Read Quote
Autobiography should be more stringent. It should adhere more to the standards of journalism – assuming that journalism has the truth. The memoir gives you more scope, is more poetic, and allows you to play around with your own life. Frank McCourt Read Quote
Just luxuriate in a certain memory, and the details will come. It’s like a magnet attracting steel filings. Frank McCourt Read Quote