Memories from the Abyss/But I Had a Happy Childhood

Nonfiction, History, Modern, 20th Century, Biography & Memoir, Historical, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science
Cover of the book Memories from the Abyss/But I Had a Happy Childhood by William Tannenzapf, Renate Krakauer, The Azrieli Foundation
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Author: William Tannenzapf, Renate Krakauer ISBN: 9781897470657
Publisher: The Azrieli Foundation Publication: September 1, 2009
Imprint: The Azrieli Foundation Language: English
Author: William Tannenzapf, Renate Krakauer
ISBN: 9781897470657
Publisher: The Azrieli Foundation
Publication: September 1, 2009
Imprint: The Azrieli Foundation
Language: English

William Tannenzapf never wavered in his determination to survive and save his wife and baby girl from the evil that gripped his home town of Stanislawów. Blond, cherubic, Renate Krakauer was a “miracle baby” born as the world descended into war and soon surrounded by misery and death. Starved and enslaved, Tannenzapf entrusted his daughter to a Polish family so that little Renate could live in “childhood oblivion” – yet still under the eyes of her loving parents. Later reunited and thrown into the trials of refugee and immigrant life, Krakauer’s thoughtful observations provide fascinating insight into the perceptions of a child survivor and offer a poignant counterpoint to Tannenzapf’s adult reflections on the same events. This gripping volume offers the reader the rare opportunity to read survival stories from two members of the same family.

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William Tannenzapf never wavered in his determination to survive and save his wife and baby girl from the evil that gripped his home town of Stanislawów. Blond, cherubic, Renate Krakauer was a “miracle baby” born as the world descended into war and soon surrounded by misery and death. Starved and enslaved, Tannenzapf entrusted his daughter to a Polish family so that little Renate could live in “childhood oblivion” – yet still under the eyes of her loving parents. Later reunited and thrown into the trials of refugee and immigrant life, Krakauer’s thoughtful observations provide fascinating insight into the perceptions of a child survivor and offer a poignant counterpoint to Tannenzapf’s adult reflections on the same events. This gripping volume offers the reader the rare opportunity to read survival stories from two members of the same family.

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