Trafford Publishing
Pinball Games: Arts of Survival in the Nazi and Communist Eras
Pinball Games: Arts of Survival in the Nazi and Communist Eras
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After a youth marked by golden days on the Danube, the author and many of his classmates are drafted into "the white armbands"- labor battalions of Christian Jews. They jump for their lives from a train bound for the death camps, and eventually make their way back to Budapest to live through the Siege of Budapest, one of the longest and least written about sieges of World War II. With peace come more golden days on the Danube, but they are illusions: Stalin's "Communist Agenda" forces more escapes.
The author, his stepmother, and his father, whose business had been among the first private businesses seized in Budapest, successfully navigate land mines and wire fences to reach the West. "There might be difficult days ahead but I knew those years that called forth the greatest effort of my life were over," writes George F. Eber. "At the time of our escape, the term Iron Curtain was rather newly coined. To me it still meant the great metal fire-curtain in the Budapest theatres of my youth. Now the Iron Curtain had fallen behind us on the theatre of the macabre."
Author: F. Eber George F. Eber
Publisher: Trafford Publishing
Published: 05/14/2010
Pages: 380
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.57lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 1.00d
ISBN: 9781426924811
About the Author
George F. Eber was born in Budapest in 1923. Following World War II and the advent of Communism, he crossed a mined border to immigrate to Canada in 1950. He opened his own architectural practice. During Canada's Expo '67, he was co-architect for eleven participating countries. He died in 1995 shortly after finishing Pinball Games.
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