Frank McCourt's Pulitzer-winning memoir, penned at 66, transformed poverty into poetry. This worldwide phenomenon spent 117 weeks on bestseller lists, pioneered "misery lit," and inspired a museum in Limerick. How did a retired teacher's Irish childhood captivate four million readers?
著者の声を通じて本を感じる
知識を魅力的で例が豊富な洞察に変換
キーアイデアを瞬時にキャプチャして素早く学習
楽しく魅力的な方法で本を楽しむ
When I look back on my childhood I wonder how I survived at all. It was, of course, a miserable childhood: the happy childhood is hardly worth your while.
『Angela’s Ashes』の核心的なアイデアを分かりやすいポイントに分解し、革新的なチームがどのように創造、協力、成長するかを理解します。
『Angela’s Ashes』を素早い記憶のヒントに凝縮し、率直さ、チームワーク、創造的な回復力の主要原則を強調します。

鮮やかなストーリーテリングを通じて『Angela’s Ashes』を体験し、イノベーションのレッスンを記憶に残り、応用できる瞬間に変えます。
何でも質問し、声を選び、本当にあなたに響く洞察を一緒に作り出しましょう。

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In the rain-soaked slums of 1930s Limerick, Ireland, a young boy's consciousness awakens to a world of perpetual dampness and grinding poverty. Four-year-old Frank McCourt finds himself on a ship bound for Ireland after his parents decide to leave Depression-era Brooklyn following his baby sister's death. His mother Angela, pregnant and depressed, points out the Statue of Liberty before becoming violently ill-an ominous sign of what awaits them across the Atlantic. The Ireland they encounter bears little resemblance to the romantic homeland Frank's father Malachy had described in his stories. Instead, it's a place where "the rain creates a cacophony of hacking coughs, bronchial rattles, asthmatic wheezes, consumptive croaks." This incessant moisture becomes almost a character itself-clothes never properly dry, walls gleam with dampness, and illness flourishes in the perpetual wet. The family settles in Limerick's lanes, where they occupy increasingly squalid dwellings as their circumstances deteriorate. Their first home floods regularly with sewage from the lane; their second sits beside the community's only lavatory, filling their lives with unbearable stench. Without electricity or running water, they burn furniture, books, even the wooden beams from their own walls when desperation peaks. What would you do if your home regularly filled with sewage and the walls ran with damp? For the McCourts, this wasn't a hypothetical question but daily reality.