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As sixty-eight year old Peter Abeles confronts his ambivalence over
his mother's recent death, he laces together his childhood memories
of the prewar Austrian aristocracy his Jewish family belonged to,
the rising tide of hate that engulfed them and their decision to
flee, and the story of his life in America. In trying to come to
terms with his personal history and family, Abeles looks beyond the
immediate horrors of the Holocaust and the Diaspora to some of the
more subtle effects on the reconstructed lives that followed. He
gives a hard, honest account of his upbringing by a cold, demanding
father and an embittered, materialistic mother-but he frames that
account in forgiveness and redemption, imagining his dead mother as
she receives a treasure box of wisdom. that has much to say about
exile and immigration, about class, money, love and forgiveness. In
Otto, the Boy at the Window, they offer readers some hard-earned
shreds of Kabbalah. Praise for Otto, the Boy at the Window: This
unforgettable book opens with the death of Abeles' mother in Long
Island when he was 68, which prompts him to reflect on his Viennese
childhood in the 1930s. His mother was strict and possessive, and
his father was unyielding. The father owned a thriving wholesale
shoe business, and the family had servants and tutors. Abeles
relives the Anschluss of March 12, 1938, when the Nazis took
control of Austria, and he remembers mobs of Nazi sympathizers
destroying synagogues and Jewish-owned properties during
Kristallnacht in November of that year. In November 1939, the
family sailed from Rotterdam to New York with only USD10 left from
their fortune. They went to Chicago, where two sponsoring families
met them.
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