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The Last Golden Smile
Al Karasa
The Last Golden Smile
Al Karasa
Leaving home. Taking only what could be carried. Not knowing when we would return, if ever. It was the choice made by millions, a choice imposed by war. The alternative was death. Or worse. The unknown was better. So begins this story of survival at impossible odds. Part history and part memoir, this book takes us into the surreal world of war as seen through a child's eyes, but reflected in adulthood in the very different light of retrospect many years later. It is the story of perseverance, in the face of overwhelming peril, that will touch the reader with its sincerity, poignancy, and warmth. Numerous books about the civilian World War Two experience deal with the Holocaust and Nazi crimes against humanity. Very few address the horrors implemented by Soviet Russia and the plight of thousands-hundreds of thousands-who fled to escape them. This book is one of those few. Al Karasa lived through the horrors of World War Two in Europe as a child and witnessed, first hand, man's inhumanity to man on a cataclysmic scale. It is stuff of which nightmares are made. The author learned, used and forgot the rudiments of more languages by age seventeen than most of us engage in a lifetime. Changing countries more often than the stages of the moon became the norm during his family's escape westward. This is the story of that escape. For more about the author and his work, visit belgate.tripod.com.
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | February 25, 2017 |
ISBN13 | 9781625504838 |
Publishers | Llumina Press |
Pages | 308 |
Dimensions | 152 × 229 × 17 mm · 412 g |
Language | English |