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A PBS Great American Read Top 100 Pick A special 75th anniversary edition of the beloved American classic about a young girl's coming-of-age at the turn of the twentieth century. From the moment she entered the world, Francie Nolan needed to be made of stern stuff, for growing up in the Williamsburg slums of Brooklyn, New York demanded fortitude, precocity, and strength of spirit. Often scorned by neighbors for her family’s erratic and eccentric behavior―such as her father Johnny’s taste for alcohol and Aunt Sissy’s habit of marrying serially without the formality of divorce―no one, least of all Francie, could say that the Nolans’ life lacked drama. By turns overwhelming, heartbreaking, and uplifting, the Nolans’ daily experiences are raw with honestly and tenderly threaded with family connectedness. Betty Smith has, in the pages of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn , captured the joys of humble Williamsburg life―from “junk day” on Saturdays, when the children traded their weekly take for pennies, to the special excitement of holidays, bringing cause for celebration and revelry. Smith has created a work of literary art that brilliantly captures a unique time and place as well as deeply resonant moments of universal experience. Here is an American classic that "cuts right to the heart of life," hails the New York Times . "If you miss A Tree Grows in Brooklyn , you will deny yourself a rich experience." Review: The Tree Grows in Brooklyn - A beautiful story. I was absolutely sucked into this book. Very relatable topics that span generations. I didn't think I was going to like this book but I absolutely enjoyed it. The characters are supportive , likeable and very strong family beliefs. Enjoy Review: An incredible read - When asked what my favorite book is, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is my answer. I may have read it 4 or 5 times over the years. It’s a slice of early 1900s Americana in poverty stricken Brooklyn that we must not forget featuring the coming of age story of sensitive, intelligent and compassionate Francie Nolan. This is the kind of book that you hate to finish because you have to say goodbye to your new friends.







| Best Sellers Rank | #394 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #3 in Cultural Heritage Fiction #12 in Multigenerational Fiction (Books) #15 in Family Saga Fiction |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 25,240 Reviews |
C**E
The Tree Grows in Brooklyn
A beautiful story. I was absolutely sucked into this book. Very relatable topics that span generations. I didn't think I was going to like this book but I absolutely enjoyed it. The characters are supportive , likeable and very strong family beliefs. Enjoy
K**N
An incredible read
When asked what my favorite book is, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is my answer. I may have read it 4 or 5 times over the years. It’s a slice of early 1900s Americana in poverty stricken Brooklyn that we must not forget featuring the coming of age story of sensitive, intelligent and compassionate Francie Nolan. This is the kind of book that you hate to finish because you have to say goodbye to your new friends.
S**E
The tree is an acronym
This story is both historical but it fits in with childhood memories. Life simple and how to cope with being poor in the early 1900’s. It looks at family unity and working together. The only disappointment was although the main character is incredibly intelligent, she was successful in that she became accomplished, but wanted to see where her life was headed.
M**A
Wow!
I've wanted to read this book for decades. Finally I did It was like reliving my childhood. I became Francie and saw her tiny world of Williamsburg, Brooklyn through her eyes. She was remarkable. This book is truly one book everyone should read. I absolutely loved it. Now, I'm sad it's come to an end. The good thing about books - you can read and cherish them over and over.
J**E
A Profoundly Moving Classic
I was seriously deprived as an adolescent. I never even heard of Betty Smith's classic novel "A Tree Grows In Brooklyn," let alone read it. And I was an avid reader who lived relatively close to Brooklyn. Whatever the reason for this significant omission in my early literary development, I remedied the situation recently, (yes, it took me a while). I can only echo here what millions of other readers have said since the book's publication in 1943, this is an extraordinary novel which enriches and delights. I can understand why The New York Public Library chose it as one of the "Books of the Century." Ms. Smith grew up in Brooklyn and drew from her own experiences to portray the hardships of the Nolans, a tenement family living in that borough's Williamsburg slums during the early part of the 20th century. Teenage Francie Nolan is an avid reader who wants to become a writer. She adores her father John, an alcoholic with a multitude of pipe dreams. He, in turn, loves his children and tries to be a good father, but he is not able to carry out his responsibilities. Nolan has become a dissipated man due to his alcohol addiction. Francie believes in him regardless, (and she's the only one), because they're soul-mates. Although it seems contradictory, the girl also possesses a strong practical streak. Her mother, Katie, abandoned all illusions for a better life long ago. She is rendered almost emotionless by a surfeit of her husband's grand schemes. However she stresses to her children that education is the only path out of the tenements. Grandma Rommely, Katie's mother, also reinforces the importance of education. There is a single ordinary tree visible from the Nolan's tenement window. It grows doggedly through the cement, in spite of harsh conditions which thwart it's development. Yet, it perseveres. For Francie and her father the tree symbolizes hope - the blossoming of life against all odds. It is like a beacon of of light in the darkness of their daily lives. Francie has the tenacity of that tree, and remains steadfast to her dreams. Unlike her father, she has the inner strength and resourcefulness to make them come true. The author poignantly depicts the Nolan's struggles to survive and grow in a world of poverty, hunger, class prejudice and tremendous loss. Francie, a courageous girl, of strong character, comes of age here under extremely difficult circumstances. The portrait of her family members and her relationship with them is beautifully drawn, especially her relationship with her brother Neely. And turn-of-the-century Williamsburg is brought vividly to life. Broader topics are also introduced which enhance the narrative tremendously, such as, WWI, immigration, and politics of the period. Smith's characters are strong and well developed. She uses flashbacks to tell the fascinating story of John Nolan's courtship of Katie, their marriage and early years together. "A Tree Grows In Brooklyn" is a heartfelt, moving novel which touched me deeply. Betty Smith's prose is powerful, as are her storyline and characters. This is a book I will keep to reread in the future. I cannot recommend it highly enough. JANA
S**L
Very enjoyable
The book itself was terrific. The text however was terribly transcribed. Words ran together, the words 'of her' were written as 'other' all throughout, and words were written with symbols mixed in or simply just as symbols. Most of the time I could figure out what was meant, but sometimes I couldn't figure it out and that was frustrating and disappointing.
F**9
Eloquent portrait of a family, a time and a place
I believe one of the best qualities of Betty Smith’s A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is Smith’s ability to take a time period, a family, and a place and paint and depict a realistic portrait. Her novel is a sketch and timeline of an immigrant family in the early portions of the 1900s living in Brooklyn. We follow the Nolan family, and more specifically we zero in on Francie Nolan as a youngster and then later as a young adult. While Smith is not going to wow anyone with her prose, she uses a simplistic approach to create a very powerful and heartfelt picture of life, with themes such as poverty, love, pain, courage, and coming of age. I think it is this simplicity that adds to the portrait of time and place. There is a moment that I think seems to signify the title of the novel quite eloquently. It is when Francie’s mother Katie Nolan is speaking to others about her baby, who is struggling to live: “Who wants to die? Ever thing struggles to live. Look at that tree growing up there out of the grating. It gets no sun, and water only when it rains. It’s growing out of the sour earth. And it’s strong because its hard struggle to live is making it strong. My children will be strong that way.” I think this a fitting quote and moment because it typifies the entire struggle of the Nolan clan, symbolic of their poverty and their circumstances, yet the tree’s struggle and will to live a metaphor for courage and perseverance amid those difficulties. This is not a book where there are ultimately rainbows, unicorns and butterflies on the other side of desperate times and life’s harsh realities. At times, the novel can be quite depressing and many characters struggle hard fights and sometimes lose in painful ways, and you feel for them. Nevertheless, I think this adds to the power of the novel because Smith has an honesty approach in telling her tale. There’s a lot of pathos and emotion amid A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, and so I was glad to be reading another book alongside this one to sort of balance everything out. On a side note, I know this book is often categorized as a “young adult” novel, but I would sort of question that due to some of the subject matter. I think A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is a very powerful book. It does take an emotional investment on the part of the reader at times but, ultimately, we become invested in the Nolans and Francie and their lives.
M**E
An American Classic
A perennial classic, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith, was first published in 1943. I don’t remember how old I was when I first read the novel, nor do I remember absorbing as much of the rich, sensitive writing as I have with this second, recent reading. The book, set in the early 1900s, rarely leaves the Brooklyn area and most of that takes place in rough tenement neighborhoods. It is tough living, especially for poor people. And Francie’s family is poor. Her mother scrubs floors in three tenement buildings to keep the family in food and rent. Her father works as a singing waiter, when he can get a job, but he has a serious drinking problem. Even so, he’s a loving father and his children adore him. Mary Frances Nolan, or Francie, is the oldest child, followed by her brother, only a year younger. Much later another little girl is born. The story is told mostly from Francie’s point of view. Francie is always thinking, her creative mind trying to make sense of what is going on around her. The hardships and rough living conditions are accepted, mostly without complaint, but her dreams soar with her imagination, intelligence and creativity. At that time and place, graduating from sixth grade was an impressive accomplishment, but Francie has the impossible dream of going to college. Francie’s life is metaphorically compared to a Chinese sumac, the Tree of Heaven, common to Brooklyn tenement yards. The tree is indestructible; can seemingly grow out of cement. Francie often sits on a fire escape in the shade of the tree’s umbrella-shaped leaves to blissfully read and dream. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is a poignant story of perseverance and hope amidst hardship. Even if you read this book years ago, it’s worth reading again. This second reading brought fresh insights and a deeper understanding of our country’s attitudes and values of that time period. I recommend this book for anyone twelves years and older. It is truly an American classic.
A**E
wonderful novel - brilliant writing
The story starts with the narration of a little girl named Francie Nolan descendant of Irish immigrants living near Brooklyn at the beginning of the 20 th century. The family has to struggle through a life of poverty and its exposure to the fierce rules of working conditions of that period. Her father, a dreamer, gets only access to odd jobs, whereas her mother is the down-to-earth woman who finally becomes the principal source of income. Despite this almost desperate situation, the story tells also about hope and positive developments by beliefing in oneself and continuous striving for a better life. Francie dreams since she was a little girl of becoming a writer and against all odds she manages even to study at university.
L**S
A tender portrait of a lost world
I first read this book many years ago, when I was in my early teens. One or two of the passages stuck in my mind for some reason, but other than that it didn’t make much of an impression on me. Now, reading it approximately 50 years later, I’m deeply impressed by it. It’s a tender, loving portrait of a forgotten world – tenement dwellers in Brooklyn in the years before World War I. The main character is Francis, a young girl of exceptional promise who has a talent for observing the world around her, finding the positive in almost everything, and writing. All the characters are drawn with sympathy and tenderness, including the alcoholic father, the dying neighbour, and the hard-working young mother. But what struck me most was the lost world in which the story takes place. These people had absolutely nothing at a time when (literally) a few pennies could make the difference between having and not having any dinner. The deprivation was of a kind that we in North America rarely see anymore: things like people living out their whole lives in the space of a few city blocks, babies dying for want of basic medical care, children contributing a few important pennies to the family’s struggle to eat each day, and so on. But these people kept on, and the determined few managed to build lives for themselves and their children. I understand that the author originally wrote this as a memoir, but was convinced by a publisher to rewrite it as fiction. What a remarkable childhood Ms Smith had, and what an exceptional person she must have been to be able to look back on those days with such fondness and tenderness. I highly recommend this book. As the cliché goes, you’ll laugh, you’ll cry. You’ll get lost in it and come away with a deep appreciation of how much things have changed for the better . . . and for the worse.
A**R
A very heartwarming story
The story of the family tells us of what’s important for us and families.
C**4
A great read
A real page Turner with endearing characters. Enjoyed every minute of it. I don't suppose today's Brooklyn looks the same.
J**E
Realismo y esperanza.
Un libro muy recomendable. Nos hace vivir la adolescencia de Francie, una etapa difícil para todos y en este caso en un entorno no muy favorable. Es una historia de supervivencia y esperanza plasmada de realismo y de la posibilidad de vencer dificultades cuando los lazos familiares se mantienen, particularmente entre padres e hijos y entre hermanos.
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