2025 Reading Challenge discussion
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A Tree Grows in Brooklyn: Chapters 43 - 56
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Alissa
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Mar 29, 2014 03:26PM

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I thought the ending was a little too nice and wrapped up (I like my books a little messier), but I also thought that it suit the rest of the book nicely and that I kind of needed it to end that way.


Re the ending, Betty Smith originally ended it with Johnny's death and Francie and Neeley solemnly declaring "to hell with God. ". The publishers wanted something less depressing and she went off and wrote the whole post-Johnny section. While the original ending might have been more. "real" I suspect that the longer upbeat ending is a big reason the book has always been so popular.

As we have testimony today you can go through college and be worst off. It is like a casino there are winners and losers. But at this time they need to CON- Vince parents to send their children to school. See Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling to help you see through the manipulation and heal from schooling.


If there was any propoganda going on here it was that literacy and reading really add to your life, but it seems like a book is not the most effective place for that message, know what I mean?
Mia, that's interesting about the original ending. It is a fair bet to say it wouldn't be the classic it is today if that were the ending.

I did not see the marriage to McShane as anything but inevitable. It seemed that the book was leading us to that end since the election picnic.

I agree that this wasn't school propaganda, given the poor experiences that Francie had at school. And look how successful she was at age 14, making more than 40-year-olds were without any high school. All college seemed to get her was a boyfriend. Public education was great for me, especially from a social aspect, allowing me to open my mind by experiencing other personalities and ways of life. Of course, the system is very broken, but that doesn't mean it's not worth fixing.
Overall, I really enjoyed the book and understand why it's a classic.

What things did Francis teach herself?
In what way did Francis' social skill primarily come from school?
How much time do we actually see her in school? We know she goes but like most stories with school in them I don't think they spend a lot of time discussing her life there.
Sorry but I think school was a waste of my time. Taught me to trust authority and not my own intuition. It made me doubt that I could make decisions for my life that were valuable to my future plans. It took years to get over this indoctrination and exploitation.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Millionaire Mind (other topics)Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling (other topics)
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (other topics)