Fifth-generation New Yorker, third-generation bartender, and first-generation author Tara Clancy was raised in three wildly divergent homes: a converted boat shed in working-class Queens, a geriatric commune of feisty Brooklyn-born Italians, and a sprawling Hamptons estate she visited every other weekend. From scheming and gambling with her force-of-nature grandmother, to brawling with eleven-year-old girls on the concrete recess battle yard of MS 172, to hours lounging on Adirondack chairs next to an immaculate croquet lawn, to holding court beside Joey O'Dirt, Goiter Eddy, and Roger the Dodger at her dad's local bar, Tara leapfrogs across these varied spheres, delivering stories from each world with originality, grit, and outrageous humor. Chock-full of characters who escape the popular imaginings of New York City, it offers a bold portrait of real people, whose stories are largely absent from our shelves. Most crucially, it captures--an inimitable prose--the rarely heard voices of New York's working-class women. --
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There aren't many 20 somethings who have enough life experience to warrant a memoir. Tara Clancy is not one of them. I read this book in one evening and, once I got past the prologue, enjoyed her trip down memory lane. I think anyone who grew up in a culturally diverse neighborhood, surrounded by multi-generations of family can relate to it, even though Tara Clancy's “world” was a section of Queens, New York. It is a love story encompassing the first 20 years of her life and how she was formed by family and place.
The Clancy's of Queens is about an only child of divorced parents with working-class roots of Italian/Irish origin. Her life was anything but ordinary and in 20 years had enough living in her to write this entertaining, funny, and poignant story of life as she knew it.