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Last pick : a whimsical warmhearted autobiography of a twelve-year-old who became a great trial lawyer  Cover Image Book Book

Last pick : a whimsical warmhearted autobiography of a twelve-year-old who became a great trial lawyer / Pierce O'Donnell.

O'Donnell, Pierce, (author.).

Summary:

A whimsical warmhearted autobiography of a twelve-year-old who became a great trial lawyer The oldest of four children in a prototypical Irish Catholic family, Pierce O'Donnell recounts growing up in a village with more cows than residents with his WWII-hero father, who owns the only liquor store; his intellectual mother, the librarian; his spinster aunt, the local postmaster; his three younger sisters; and a ghost named Nora. Last Pick adroitly conjures up a bygone era in which this young boy's biggest concerns were making the Little League Team (he never did), not freezing to death delivering a newspaper, making Eagle Scout, and learning Latin as a reluctant altar boy allergic to incense. This self-deprecating story of a determined, well-meaning underdog will delight O'Donnell's fellow Baby Boomers and enchant younger generations for years to come with its witty and timeless humor.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781644282953
  • ISBN: 164428295X
  • Physical Description: 212 pages, 8 pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
  • Publisher: Los Angeles : Rare Bird Books, 2022.
Subject: O'Donnell, Pierce.
Lawyers > United States > Biography.
Lawyers.
United States.
Genre: Biographies.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Cedar County.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Cedar County - Stockton B O'DO (Text) 3482700076583 Adult Biography Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781644282953
Last Pick : A Baby Boomer's Boyhood
Last Pick : A Baby Boomer's Boyhood
by O'Donnell, Pierce
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Kirkus Review

Last Pick : A Baby Boomer's Boyhood

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In this memoir, a man describes a childhood and adolescence spent in a small town in New York state, with a focus on 1959. O'Donnell, who achieved prominence as a trial lawyer, introduces this slim volume by explaining he had an impulse in the late 1990s to record his childhood memories. The author actually lost, recovered, and revised the manuscript twice before finally publishing it. Given that history, the repetition of certain details is understandable. O'Donnell grew up in Averill Park, near Troy, in central New York state. He puts special emphasis on people, events, and (most of all) the ambiance of 1959, a glorious year pivotal for the author as an adolescent Irish Catholic having a triumphant (largely crisis-free) coming-of-age. Reflections are almost always fond even though O'Donnell's title references that among his schoolboy peers, he was habitually bullied and picked last for sports (as much as he adored baseball and football) because of his pudgy frame. In contrast, the author's dad was a fitness buff, a Depression-hewn World War II veteran, hard worker, ethical liquor store proprietor, and solid family man. O'Donnell's mother was liberal-minded and literate; late in life, she went back to school and became a librarian. The family's Roman Catholicism is rarely a source of repression; in fact, the author writes that, under different circumstances, he could have entered the priesthood. In this charming, upbeat portrait with rich, evocative details, there is also a nurturing maiden aunt, a strict but cherished schoolteacher, a family ghost ("She had dark hair, high cheekbones, and a pleasant smile"), hunting and fishing trips with nearby eccentrics, early TV favorites, and the resigned acceptance of anti-Catholic prejudice among the area's Methodists and critics of President John F. Kennedy. Finally, O'Donnell recounts that he overcame his challenges to make Eagle Scout. An epilogue indicates that adult life was not entirely rosy for the storyteller, but there are no rueful or bitter associations with his boyhood--especially 1959. Author William Kennedy (Ironweed), athletes Mickey Mantle and Jack Dempsey, and entertainer Jerry Lewis make cameos in this sweet-spirited memoir that skillfully resists becoming mawkish. The engaging book may remind readers of Tom Brokaw's A Long Way Home (2002) and Bob Greene's Be True to Your School (1987). An affectionate, appealing, and unsentimental look back on an all-American boyhood in the '50s. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


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