Growing Up

By Russell Baker
Image of Growing Up (Signet)
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I thought that was a model memoir. I know he was sort of stuck on it for a while, and then he found these letters that his mother had exchanged during the Depression. And there was a lot of reporting in that book. Russell Baker, who has spent his life mainly as a reporter, is much more concerned with “Hey, did that really happen or am I just making it happen?” Also, it’s establishing place that I often find the most satisfying part of any book. Baker really captures the era he’s writing about. You really felt a time in America from reading that book.

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In an interview on Memoirs

Interview Extract:

Your next choice is by the long-time New York Times columnist Russell Baker.

Yes, I thought Growing Up was a model memoir. I know he was sort of stuck on it for a while, and then he found these letters that his mother had exchanged during the Depression. And there was a lot of reporting in that book. I think if you take somebody like Baker, who has spent his life mainly as a reporter, he has a different approach to memoir, than someone who has spent her life, say, as a poet. In the first place, he is much more concerned with, “Hey, did that really happen or am I just making it happen?”

Also, it’s establishing place that I often find the most satisfying part of any book. Good mysteries, for instance, I don’t find interesting because of the puzzle of “Who did it?” Really good mystery writers establish a sense of place and Mary Karr did that with The Liars’ Club. And, in the same way, Russell Baker did that with the era he’s writing about in Growing Up. You really felt a time in America from reading that book.

That time being the Great Depression?

Yes, and the years after it. He really gave a sense of the era that you couldn’t get from just a history book. I thought it was a marvellous book.

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About Calvin Trillin

Calvin Trillin is an American journalist and humorist. He has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 1963 and has written 26 books. He has composed rhyming verses about the Bush administration and one of his novels, Tepper Isn’t Going Out, is devoted to the subject of street parking in New York City.