HOW IT WAS
A humorous look at Catholic parenting in the 1950s
by
Book Details
About the Book
Before 9/11…
Before President’s sex lives were talked about on the 6 pm news…
Before the sexual and feminist revolutions…
Way, way before Political Correctness…
There was a simpler time...a time when large families were not unusual...a time when everyone read “The Smith Family” cartoon in the Boston Globe (and other newspapers across the country).
In the mid 1950s, Elsie Jennings, writer, and George Smith, cartoonist, were collaborating on a book with her stories and his drawings. Elsie’s stories, like George’s cartoons, found humor in the everyday occurrences of large-family life. Elsie became quite ill and died before finishing the project, but her daughter, Mary, has kept the material for over 50 years.
- If you remember “Duck and Cover”
- Nuns with yardsticks used as weapons on knuckles and knees
- If you grew up Catholic in the 1950s or early 1960s, or if you know someone who did
- If you’ve seen the play “Late Nite Catechism” and it brought you back to your own parochial school days, and you laughed so hard you had a stomachache for days...
About the Author
This book is a compilation of short stories written over 50 years ago by my mother (Elsie Jennings) and illustrated by George Smith. Elsie, a convert to Catholicism, battled life-long with respiratory ailments, and although advised by doctors not to have any children, she was determined to have a family and bore 5 children. The stories are about raising those children. She found humor in every-day situations, as did George Smith who portrayed large-family life in the nationally syndicated cartoon "The Smith Family". I live at present in the Tuscan area of Italy. I retired here after serving in the US Navy. I garden, teach English and give piano lessons.