Frank McCourt Quotes


Frank McCourt

The poverty and the influence of the church were very damaging. It damaged all of us emotionally. To be poor deprives you of self-esteem.

Something happened to the spirit in the famine, and they retreated into their caverns and into themselves. And they haven`t come out.

I admire certain priests and nuns who go off on their own and do God`s work on their own, who help in the ghettos, but as far as the institution of the church is concerned, I think it is despicable.

I`m more interested in writing than in performing.

I can`t go too much into my domestic life because there are ex-wives ready to do me in.

I had to get rid of any idea of hell or any idea of the afterlife. That`s what held me, kept me down. So now I just have nothing but contempt for the institution of the church.

I think I settled on the title before I ever wrote the book.

We never really had any kind of a Christmas. This is one part where my memory fails me completely.

They all went into the bar business. Which was a mistake, because they began to sip at the merchandise and it set them back, set us all back. Well, them more than I.

I began to look at other religions, Buddhism and so on, and realized there is another way of looking at life. A more benign way of looking at life.

My childhood here... was very limited. So it was a long, long time before I actually went out to Brooklyn.

When I first came to New York and saw Italian families and their displays of affection, I was taken aback a bit because it was uninhibited.

There`s so much absurdity. Poverty is so absurd.

Actually, my mother and Alfie came for three weeks` Christmas vacation and stayed for 21 years. I guess my mother never went back because she was lonely.

You feel a sense of urgency, especially at my advanced age, when you`re staring into the grave.

First of all there is always that artistic challenge of creating something. Or the particular experience to take slum life in that period and make something out of it in the form of a book. And then I felt some kind of responsibility to my family.

I had no accomplishments except surviving. But that isn`t enough in the community where I came from, because everybody was doing it. So I wasn`t prepared for America, where everybody is glowing with good teeth and good clothes and food.

I was beginning to think that you could somehow miraculously dig down into your memory and bring back stuff that is stored there.

I just have to proceed as usual. No matter what happens, nothing helps with the writing of the next book.

And, of course, they`ve always condemned dancing. You know, you might touch a member of the opposite sex. And you might get excited and you might do something natural.

The sky is the limit. You never have the same experience twice.

I`ve been writing in notebooks for 40 years or so.

I`m not one of those James Joyce intellectuals who can stand back and look at the whole edifice... It was a slow process for me to just crawl out of it, like a snake leaving his skin behind.

The main thing I am interested in is my experience as a teacher.

Happiness is hard to recall. Its just a glow.

He came to the States in 1963, I think with a view to making up with my mother, but that didn`t work. He came for three weeks, and drank his way all over Brooklyn. And went back... I went to his funeral in Belfast.






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