Explore why Betty Smith's beloved classic about Francie Nolan's coming-of-age in early 1900s Brooklyn deserves serious literary recognition despite being often dismissed as merely sentimental fiction.

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**Jackson:** Hey there, book lovers! Welcome to another episode of "Between the Pages." I'm Jackson, and today I'm joined by my friend and fellow bibliophile, Miles. We're diving into a true American classic that, despite selling over 4 million copies and never going out of print since 1943, somehow still doesn't get the serious literary attention it deserves.
**Miles:** That's right, Jackson. *A Tree Grows in Brooklyn* by Betty Smith is one of those fascinating paradoxes in American literature. It's beloved by readers—Oprah Winfrey calls it "the book that moved me most when I was growing up"—yet it's often dismissed by academics as merely "sentimental" or "a book for young readers."
**Jackson:** Which is crazy when you think about it! I mean, this is a book that was so popular with soldiers during World War II that there were reportedly 200 men on a waiting list to read it at one point. One Marine even wrote to Betty Smith saying the book made him cry, which he thought would be impossible in war.
**Miles:** Exactly. And what's fascinating is how the novel works on multiple levels. On the surface, it's about Francie Nolan growing up poor in Brooklyn in the early 1900s, but it's also a profound exploration of hunger—both literal hunger from poverty and metaphorical hunger for knowledge, for beauty, for life itself.
**Jackson:** You know, that's what struck me most about the book—how vividly it portrays that hunger. Francie commits to reading a book every day, sitting on her fire escape with peppermint wafers and ice water, transforming this metal structure meant for emergency escapes into a sanctuary for her imagination.
**Miles:** Let's explore how Betty Smith created this enduring portrait of a young artist's development, and why this "folk aesthetic" novel continues to resonate with readers across generations, cultures, and backgrounds more than 80 years after its publication.