![]() Fitzgerald nestles comfortably on a bar stool beside writers like Kerouac, Bukowski, Richard Price and Pete Hamill. Of course, there is no shortage of similar men in American literature. ![]() He describes his book as a “confessional,” although the only actual scene of confession we get is when young Isaac describes an early sexual encounter to an overly alert priest, who Isaac later suspects was masturbating while listening.įitzgerald is the author of the children’s book “How to Be a Pirate,” which tracks with his brazen tale. Some of us more than others, few of us as prodigiously and joyfully as Isaac Fitzgerald, whose new memoir, “Dirtbag, Massachusetts,” chronicles his upbringing as the accidental byproduct of sin between two divinity students his turbulent and violent childhood his years of drugging, day drinking, scrapping, bartending and acting in porn along with a sideline of missionary work in two Southeast Asian war zones. ![]() ![]() DIRTBAG, MASSACHUSETTS: A Confessional, by Isaac Fitzgeraldįorgive us men, for we have sinned. ![]()
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