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Children and Fish Don't Talk, Adventures with Nazis, Communists, and the Metropolitan Opera
Leshek Zavistovski in Collaboration with Monique Zavistovski and Toni Rapport Zavistovski
Children and Fish Don't Talk, Adventures with Nazis, Communists, and the Metropolitan Opera
Leshek Zavistovski in Collaboration with Monique Zavistovski and Toni Rapport Zavistovski
In the winter of 1964, three weeks after defecting from Poland and the night after playing a flashy holiday performance with the Rockettes at Radio City, Leshek Zavistovski was arrested and faced deportation to a gulag. His troubles started, however, long before he was a fugitive cellist behind bars. As a four-year-old child he was abandoned in a remote Polish village, kidnapped, and swept into the advancing Red Army. Thus his perils began. Children and Fish Don't Talk is more than Leshek's dramatic story. He recounts in thrilling detail his father's defiance against the Nazis in the Warsaw Uprising, the ghastly deeds of Cossacks and the Soviet KGB, the hilarious antics of a foreigner at the height of McCarthyism, the vibrant world of the Metropolitan Opera in the 1960s, his elderly mother's foxy attempt to crush the Iron Curtain with homemade posters and glue, and numerous encounters with Polish sausage. It is a breathtaking tale of survival, taking readers from the poverty of post-war Poland to the lavish dinner tables of America's rich and famous, an adventure as harrowing as it is funny. And that's because it's true. Includes Index, Glossary, and Bibliography.
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | August 5, 2013 |
ISBN13 | 9780865349582 |
Publishers | Sunstone Press |
Pages | 322 |
Dimensions | 150 × 229 × 18 mm · 453 g |
Language | English |