
The Glass Castle
by Jeannette Walls
Jeannette Walls recounts her extraordinary childhood, raised by brilliant but dysfunctional nomadic parents who flouted convention and neglected their children's basic needs.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)American · b. 1960
American journalist and memoirist whose The Glass Castle is an unflinching account of her chaotic, nomadic childhood with deeply unconventional and often neglectful parents.
Jeannette Walls was a New York gossip columnist with a successful career when she published The Glass Castle in 2005 — a memoir about a childhood she had spent years concealing from her professional peers. The book recounts growing up with Rex and Rose Mary Walls, her brilliant, charismatic, and profoundly irresponsible parents who moved the family constantly, lived in conditions of extreme poverty, and operated according to a philosophy of radical self-reliance that was, in practice, a series of rationalizations for neglect.
What makes The Glass Castle extraordinary is Walls’s tone: she writes about her childhood with clear-eyed intelligence and without obvious bitterness. She neither sentimentalizes her parents nor demonizes them, which is both the memoir’s moral achievement and, for some readers, its uncomfortable quality. Rex Walls in particular comes through as a man of genuine brilliance and total irresponsibility — Walls allows readers to love and resent him simultaneously, which is precisely what she seems to have done herself.

by Jeannette Walls
Jeannette Walls recounts her extraordinary childhood, raised by brilliant but dysfunctional nomadic parents who flouted convention and neglected their children's basic needs.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)guide
Where to start with Jeannette Walls — how to approach The Glass Castle, her essential memoir about an extraordinary nomadic childhood. A complete reading guide.
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Jeannette Walls's memoir of growing up with her brilliant, charismatic, catastrophically irresponsible parents — who moved the family constantly, never had enough food, and promised to build a glass castle — is the most-read American family memoir. These books share its mixture of love and horror, its unsentimental clear-eyedness about parents.
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