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For Ethel Erickson Radmer, a child of the 1930s, life in Wisconsin was an adventure filled with imagination, fun, and curiosity. Hers was a simple life, without computers and cell phones. It was a time when people in a small town dropped in on each other to visit and paid their bills in person. It was a time when folks honored courtesy and neighborly affection. If you knew someone was in the hospital, you brought them flowers-from your own garden. Ethel grew up in a railroad town that bustled with supplies and troops for World War II. To a small girl from a small town, a Green Bay & Western Railroad passenger car represented nothing short of freedom. But Ethel found joy in the simple things-a playground for roller skating ... a golf course made just for picnics and sled-ding (and swinging clubs) ... nearby farmland and barns to explore ... and a meandering river to quiet her heart. It was a simpler time, but Ethel Erickson Radmer was no simple girl. ""Walking the Rails" is everything a good memoir should
be-generously detailed, disarmingly frank, and emotionally moving.
With wit, irony, and generosity of spirit, Ethel Radmer has woven a
heartwarming and lush tapestry of growing up in a loving American
family during the difficult days of the Great Depression, World War
II, and its aftermath."
For Ethel Erickson Radmer, a child of the 1930s, life in Wisconsin was an adventure filled with imagination, fun, and curiosity. Hers was a simple life, without computers and cell phones. It was a time when people in a small town dropped in on each other to visit and paid their bills in person. It was a time when folks honored courtesy and neighborly affection. If you knew someone was in the hospital, you brought them flowers-from your own garden. Ethel grew up in a railroad town that bustled with supplies and troops for World War II. To a small girl from a small town, a Green Bay & Western Railroad passenger car represented nothing short of freedom. But Ethel found joy in the simple things-a playground for roller skating ... a golf course made just for picnics and sled-ding (and swinging clubs) ... nearby farmland and barns to explore ... and a meandering river to quiet her heart. It was a simpler time, but Ethel Erickson Radmer was no simple girl. ""Walking the Rails" is everything a good memoir should
be-generously detailed, disarmingly frank, and emotionally moving.
With wit, irony, and generosity of spirit, Ethel Radmer has woven a
heartwarming and lush tapestry of growing up in a loving American
family during the difficult days of the Great Depression, World War
II, and its aftermath."
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