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In the aftermath of World War II, the author was among those
relocated in what may have been the largest forced resettlement of
a population in modern history - the expulsion of at least twelve
million people from the former German provinces of East Prussia,
Silesia, and Pomerania, as well as from German enclaves in Eastern
Europe. As a result, West Germany's population swelled with the
arrival of millions of refugees. With housing already scarce, jobs
hard to come by, and religious differences often setting them
apart, the newcomers were not always welcomed with open arms.
STRETCH recounts the thirteen eventful years in the author's life
following his reunion with his father in Cologne, West Germany, in
1950. With both humor and suspense, STRETCH provides a fascinating
glimpse into German life during a period when the country was
experiencing a transformative economic recovery, but also at times
struggling to confront the shadow of its recent Nazi past.
The uprooting of seven million civilians - women, children, and
elderly men - from their homes in the German provinces of East
Prussia, Pomerania, and Silesia following World War II is largely
unknown in the United States. Weeds Like Us is a gripping true
adventure story about the author's own East Prussian family. The
author's earliest years were spent in relative comfort on his
grandfather's farm in East Prussia during World War II. For him,
life in Hitler's Germany was the natural order of things. Then, in
January 1945, just after the author's seventh birthday, the
Russians rolled into East Prussia. Full of unexpected twists and
turns, Weeds Like Us tells the story of what happened over the next
six years, as the author's family tried to make its way safely to
the West.
A SINGULAR EDUCATION: A German Bachelor in New York (1964-1974)
recounts the turbulent first decade that German-born author Gunter
Nitsch spent in New York City. Fresh off the boat in April 1964 as
an idealistic twenty-six-year-old confirmed bachelor with just $400
to his name and no prospects, his journey of discovery eventually
takes him to elegant receptions and white tie events at fine
hotels, as well as to a Head Start classroom in Harlem, to the home
of an unrepentant Nazi on Staten Island, to a wild clothing
optional party in Greenwich Village, to sit-ins at Hunter College,
and even to a cockfight in the South Bronx. Along the way several
people unexpectedly offer him help; many others insist on blaming
him for World War II. With self-deprecating humor and the unique
perspective of a recent German immigrant, A SINGULAR EDUCATION is
set against a backdrop of the prejudices -- against
African-Americans, Jews, anyone, in fact, considered the other --
that remained deeply ingrained in the American psyche at the time.
Technische und arbeitswissenschaftliche Aspekte bei der Einfuhrung
von CAD-Systemen konnen mit diesen Entscheidungshilfen bewaltigt
werden. Ingenieurburos, die die Beschaffung geeigneter Systeme
planen, erhalten hiermit wertvolle Hinweise zur Vermeidung von
teuren Fehlinvestitionen. Ein Lexikonteil zu aktuellen Fragen bei
der Planung von CAD-Systemen wird erganzt durch Adressen von
Verbanden, Hinweisen zur Finanzierung und Checklisten zur
Vorbereitung."
A SINGULAR EDUCATION: A German Bachelor in New York (1964-1974)
recounts the turbulent first decade that German-born author Gunter
Nitsch spent in New York City. Fresh off the boat in April 1964 as
an idealistic twenty-six-year-old confirmed bachelor with just $400
to his name and no prospects, his journey of discovery eventually
takes him to elegant receptions and white tie events at fine
hotels, as well as to a Head Start classroom in Harlem, to the home
of an unrepentant Nazi on Staten Island, to a wild clothing
optional party in Greenwich Village, to sit-ins at Hunter College,
and even to a cockfight in the South Bronx. Along the way several
people unexpectedly offer him help; many others insist on blaming
him for World War II. With self-deprecating humor and the unique
perspective of a recent German immigrant, A SINGULAR EDUCATION is
set against a backdrop of the prejudices -- against
African-Americans, Jews, anyone, in fact, considered "the other" --
that remained deeply ingrained in the American psyche at the time.
In the aftermath of World War II, the author was among those
relocated in what may have been the largest forced resettlement of
a population in modern history - the expulsion of at least twelve
million people from the former German provinces of East Prussia,
Silesia, and Pomerania, as well as from German enclaves in Eastern
Europe. As a result, West Germany's population swelled with the
arrival of millions of refugees. With housing already scarce, jobs
hard to come by, and religious differences often setting them
apart, the newcomers were not always welcomed with open arms.
STRETCH recounts the thirteen eventful years in the author's life
following his reunion with his father in Cologne, West Germany, in
1950. With both humor and suspense, STRETCH provides a fascinating
glimpse into German life during a period when the country was
experiencing a transformative economic recovery, but also at times
struggling to confront the shadow of its recent Nazi past.
The uprooting of seven million civilians - women, children, and
elderly men - from their homes in the German provinces of East
Prussia, Pomerania, and Silesia following World War II is largely
unknown in the United States. Weeds Like Us is a gripping true
adventure story about the author's own East Prussian family. The
author's earliest years were spent in relative comfort on his
grandfather's farm in East Prussia during World War II. For him,
life in Hitler's Germany was the natural order of things. Then, in
January 1945, just after the author's seventh birthday, the
Russians rolled into East Prussia. Full of unexpected twists and
turns, Weeds Like Us tells the story of what happened over the next
six years, as the author's family tried to make its way safely to
the West.
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