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The Glass Castle [Paperback]

Jeannette Walls
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2,565 customer reviews)


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Book Description

2005
a trade paperback book,a memoir


Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Scribner; First Edition edition (2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0739458213
  • ISBN-13: 978-0739458211
  • Product Dimensions: 8.1 x 5.5 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2,565 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #886,276 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jeannette Walls lives in Virginia and is married to the writer John Taylor. She is a regular contributor to MSNBC and has worked at several publications, including Esquire, USA Today, and New York.

Customer Reviews

Ms. Walls is an excellent writer and tells her sad story very well. K. Metzger  |  731 reviewers made a similar statement
In The Glass Castle, Jeannette Walls tells the story of her amazing life. jeanne-scott  |  351 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1,012 of 1,052 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars True to Life Account November 13, 2005
Format:Hardcover
I grew up in Welch, WV and was acquainted with Jeanette and Brian(Lori was older and Maureen was younger). I can attest that her harrowing account of growing up with an alcoholic father and mentally ill mother in the coalfields of WV was as she says. This was a compelling read, all the more so, because it was about people and places I knew so well. As I read, I was filled with sorrow and shame because I was one of those people who didn't want to have close association with them because they were so different from me. I try to asuage my guilt by telling myself I saw things from a child's maturity level. I wish I could apologize and find myself wondering what would have happened if I had befriended Jeanette. She could have enriched my like tremendously. For those of you who doubt things could not have happened like it was written, don't. I knew it and I saw it, and to a degree, lived it. And as tragic as it was, it was true.
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819 of 873 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars WHAT A COURAGEOUS MEMOIR - - BRAVO! February 27, 2005
Format:Hardcover
First, "The Glass Castle" is a real page turner - - I couldn't put it down and finished it in about four hours - - a record for me!

It's probably the most thoughtful and sensitive memoir I can ever remember reading - - told with such grace, kindness and fabulous sense of humor.

It's probably the best account ever written of a dysfunctional family -- and it must have taken Walls so much courage to put pen to paper and recount the details of her rather bizarre childhood - - which although it's like none other and is so dramatic - - any reader will relate to it. Readers will find bits and pieces of their own parents in Rex and Rose Mary Walls.

Her journey across the country, ending up in a poor mining town in West Virginia and then finally in New York City, is a fascinating tale of survival.

Her zest for life, even when eating margarine and sugar and bundled in a cardboard box with sweaters, coats and huddling with her pets, is unbelievably beautiful - - and motivating.

If I could give a book ten stars, it would be "The Glass Castle."
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410 of 444 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Inferno to Paradiso (or close enough) December 14, 2005
Format:Hardcover
Jeannette Wall's trek, as depicted in "Glass Castle", recalls Dante's

journey through Hell and eventual ascenscion to Paradise. The comparison may seem risibly over-dramatic, but just as Dante had to go through the experience of the Netherworlds before he could be led to Heaven, so, too, is Jeannette's eventual triumph the FRUIT of a childhood filled with poverty and, what some would call, parental neglect or even abuse.

In the opening section about Jeannette's early childhood, sort of the outer rungs of hell, we are introduced to the author's quirky family. Her father, Rex, is a brainy underachiever who cannot keep a job and has a bit of a "drinking situation".

The mother is an eccentric artist who cannot be bothered too much

by mundane tasks- you know, like cooking or cleaning the house. The children, all extremely bright, are often underfed and left to fend for themselves. However, if the parents have failings, they also have redeeming qualities. The children are immersed in an environment that values art, music, intellectual pursuits, freedom and self-sufficiency and spurns racism and all forms of bourgeois superficiality. Above all, the reader never doubts that Rex and his wife truly love the children. One gets the feeling throughout that Jeanette never doubts that either.

In any case, the early years are bittersweet. If there is squalor and hunger there is also humor and magic. Most of all, there is hope. The family frequently moves and, although that is frustrating, it also provided the background for a myth: that the next town would provide prosperity.

But then to Welch they did go! And, it is in this West Virginia town where her father grew up,the "Nation's Coal Bin", that Jeannette and the rest of the family descend into the lower regions of hell. All the problems are exacerbated. The father, having returned to the place he said he never would, drinks with abandon and applies more and more of the family's slim resources toward his habit. Jeanette resorts to scaveging trash barrels for sustenance and is humiliated for her tattered clothing. There is not water in the house for bathing and no heat in Winter. Swallowed by the appalachian mountains with only the two-lane US 52 out, you feel stuck. Even the pilgrim parents are unable to muster the strength to break the gravity of this place. With this immobility came the final destruction of the myth (that the family would move somewhere else and find prosperity) and, as a consequence, the destruction of hope. However, it is in this darkness that Jeannette finds her calling. She becomes a reporter for the "Maroon Wave", the Welch High School student newspaper. The rest of the book details how her dream to become a "high falutin" journalist led her to New York City and her current incarnation. Maybe not Paradiso, but close enough considering her formative years.

A number of components conflate to push Jeannette towards a succeful resolution. Certainly the positive legacy of her parents: culture, books, self-sufficiency, etc. But also the dire situation gave her a sense of urgency and the focus that comes with it: She had nothing to lose. She was lucky enough to have discovered early on a career path and did not have the leisure to ruminate ENDLESSLY on it.. This latter often brings self-doubts that paralyze youth. Unlike so many memoirs about unhappy childhoods, the author never plays the John Bradshaw card by irately denouncing her parents, nor does she try to facilely excuse them. Life is more complex than that and she understand that syzygys cannot be tampered with, lest you destroy the whole. You cant take eggs out of the cake.

On a personal note, I grew up in Welch, went to Welch High School and knew Jeannette (though not very well) who was two grades behind me. I have not seen her since High School. For those reviewers who expressed doubts about the authenticity of her story, I can tell you that at least the Welch part of the story rings true to my memory.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Makes me see responsibilities in a different light
This was a very interesting book. At first I thought that I could relate because I spent summers running around barefoot and exploring with my brother. Read more
Published 44 minutes ago by Jessica Daniels
4.0 out of 5 stars Poignant reminder of how cruel childhood can be
I am reminded of my own childhood through this work. Although NEVER as deprived as young Jeannette, and with parents who did take care of us and did their best, I can relate to... Read more
Published 1 day ago by Reading in Morgan Hill
5.0 out of 5 stars My favorite memoir - ever!
I just couldn't put this book down. What an amazing story of love and ambition against all odds. It had to be a true story, because nobody could have created these characters... Read more
Published 1 day ago by ChaCha
5.0 out of 5 stars repeat with gusto
I read this years ago but rebought it after reading Walls' 'Half Broke Horses'. After getting to know the grandmother and another aspect of the family I wanted to read this with... Read more
Published 2 days ago by Susan Supley
5.0 out of 5 stars Difficult to read-& to Put Down!!
This book is reminiscent of "Angela's Ashes" & "Stones from the River" in that the details can be/are discouraging, even depressing, at times. Read more
Published 3 days ago by Steven D. Nelson
5.0 out of 5 stars Great
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I know it is a true story - amazing that she lived thru it and ended up a "well-adjusted" person. Read more
Published 6 days ago by Susan E Martin
5.0 out of 5 stars A great non fiction that reads almost like a fiction
A recount of a very unusual childhood without falling into the pitfall of self pity. It's an unexpected page turner.
Published 6 days ago by CT
3.0 out of 5 stars Its okay
It was interesting to see the way other people live and the come see come saw attitude of the pasrents in this book. Makes you grateful for the family you grew upin.
Published 7 days ago by Charleen Law
5.0 out of 5 stars This story is so incredible - hard to imagine that it's true.
You won't believe that anyone in the US could be raised like this - survive, and turn out to be a productive - not spiteful human being. Amazing.
Published 7 days ago by Bonnie
5.0 out of 5 stars amazing story, funny, sad, and all that
hard to imagine some of the stuff this girl went through as a kid, amazing story and very well written
Published 7 days ago by shadowblue42
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