In A Brookline Boyhood Jim Harnedy takes up a new challenge in his
writing career and instead of producing a local history he narrates a
lively tale of growing up in the 1930s and 40s in Brookline, a suburb to
the southeast of Boston. Jim's grandfather came from Bantry, County
Cork, Ireland, and Jim begins his story with the Harnedy clan Saturday
night tradition of having dinner at Grandma's house. From here he takes
us to the fire at Brookline High School and the hurricane of 1938; all
memories from an impressionable young mind. Emergency surgery for a
Maine Coon kitten is another memory fragment followed by recalling
hearing Franklin D. Roosevelt on the radio following the Japanese attack
on Pearl Harbor.
Growing up in the 1940s meant the Lone Ranger, Silver and Tonto at the
movie theater and listening to radio stars while sat before a winter
fire. For anyone of sufficient years to remember such nuggets, this book
will produce evocative memories; for those of much younger years, Jim's
boyhood tale of growing up in Brookline will provide a fascinating
window into a Boston Irish family of eighty years ago.