Helpful Score: 7
A delightful, humorous story about a mother of seven coping with widowhood.
Helpful Score: 3
Seven kids, one dead husband, and not a chance that This Dublin woman will be defeated. An extremely satisfying read.
Helpful Score: 2
I really enjoyed this book with a wonderful lead character, Agness Browne, a spunky Dublin widow with seven kids who takes on an amorous owner of a pizza parlour, her daughter's witchy teacher, Sister Magdalen, and her best friends medical problems while running her produce stand. She's wonderful!
From the back of the book;
"Reads like Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes on Prozac...jaunty...
charming. It's refreshing to enter O'Carroll's fun-loving
working-class Dublin world."
I highly reccomend this.
From the back of the book;
"Reads like Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes on Prozac...jaunty...
charming. It's refreshing to enter O'Carroll's fun-loving
working-class Dublin world."
I highly reccomend this.
Helpful Score: 2
This is the same book as "The Mammy" it has just been retitled after the movie came out. It's not part of the continuing series as I thought. But the book is so good you can never have enough extras to pass on to friends... just don't expect it to be a different book. After reading the book I got the movie and it wasn't nearly half as good as the book! I'd also recommend reading all three books in the series each one is as great as the other! (The Mammy [Agnes Browne], The Chisellers, and The Granny) Now a fourth book which is about the "young" Agnes Browne - The Young Wan.
Helpful Score: 1
Very funny. Kind of Angela's Ashes inverted: a frown-turned-upside-down. The part with the funeral is hilarious (believe it or not). Plenty of sadness and poverty here, but delivered in a lighthearted format. After reading it, you kind of want to meet Brendan Carroll; he doesn't take himself too seriously, and he obviously loves his mama.