Scan barcode
avesmaria's review against another edition
4.0
Nobody writes like Annie Dillard, and maybe that's about all I can say about this, or any of her work. I love her style and her mind and being sucked into her universe.
delgremmyaward's review against another edition
3.0
This book has no plot; it does not really need one, but be warned. If you are going to read this, read it for a description of a childhood and remember that even quotidian tasks can be beautiful if a great writer describes them. Dillard makes them beautiful, but you have to pay attention.
kcrouth's review against another edition
4.0
Starting out reading Annie Dillard's "An American Childhood", I thought "this is not my childhood". But the further i read, the more fascinating this story became, and the more i felt Ms Dillard's story shared with mine. Growing up in a 1950s Pittsburgh society family, the author shares her perspectives and experiences of the 1950s, and of Pittsburgh and American culture during that time. I especially enjoyed the author's views and feelings about the ever expanding world around her as she increasingly engaged it and lived into it. Annie Dillard is the Pulitzer prize winning author of "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek" which she wrote only a few short years after the events in this story. "Pilgrim" is beautifully and thoughtfully written, imparting wisdom well beyond the author's young age. This book helps give a picture of how, when, and where Ms. Dillard came into her wealth of knowledge and wisdom. I loved this book, and, as with "Pilgrim", found myself savoring every beautifully written word.
rampaginglibrarian's review against another edition
5.0
my discovery of Annie Dillard--found on my (ex)boyfriends shelf while i was at his house. I picked it up and couldn't put it down. Dillard has become one of my favorite writers.
annepw's review
4.0
It's funny that I read this so soon after Michael Chabon's "Manhood for Amateurs," as the pair are preoccupied by many of the same themes and, of course, deeply tied to Pittsburgh. I also adore them both.
Superficially, my childhood was rather like Dillard's, insofar as we both grew up in comfortable middle-class white suburbs of Pittsburgh, and so I deeply appreciate the perspective she gives of the city in the 1950's. "An American Childhood" is one of the few memoirs ("Manhood" is another) that I have actually found worthwhile. While I think Dillard sentimentalizes the process of growing up, she is such a stylistic wizard that I would follow her to the ends of the earth.
Superficially, my childhood was rather like Dillard's, insofar as we both grew up in comfortable middle-class white suburbs of Pittsburgh, and so I deeply appreciate the perspective she gives of the city in the 1950's. "An American Childhood" is one of the few memoirs ("Manhood" is another) that I have actually found worthwhile. While I think Dillard sentimentalizes the process of growing up, she is such a stylistic wizard that I would follow her to the ends of the earth.