Castle Marcel Pagnols Memories Of Childhood - My Fathers Glory My Mothers

Years later, when he was old and famous, people asked why his childhood memoirs felt like prayers. He would answer simply: “I had a father who made the wilderness feel like home, and a mother who made home feel like a castle. Every page I write is just me, walking back through their gate.”

Marcel looked up at the star, then at his father’s dusty boots, then at the golden light spilling from the kitchen window. He understood, though he was only a boy, that he would spend the rest of his life trying to write down what he saw that evening. Years later, when he was old and famous,

To Marcel, her love was not a fortress of stone but a fortress of warmth. No matter how fierce the world outside—the schoolyard bullies, the stern priests, the mysteries of grown-up arguments—her castle had no doors that locked against him. In her presence, fear dissolved like sugar in hot milk. He understood, though he was only a boy,