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Oma and Opa Go Camping

Oma and Opa Go Camping
Author: Oma Stukenberg
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 26
Release: 2016-11-18
Genre: Camping
ISBN: 9781539800521

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In this, our third Oma and Opa story, the whole family go camping. During the night, a wind storm threatens to ruin everything. An unlikely super-hero saves the day. This story is in both English and German so our bilingual friends can use this to increase their children's English vocabulary.


Epic Grandparenting

Epic Grandparenting
Author: Fern Boldt
Publisher: Word Alive Press
Total Pages: 147
Release: 2021-02-15
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 1486620892

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Remember when you held your first grandchild? Every grunt and squeak, every adorable sneeze and snort, fascinated you. And you fell in love. Later, the baby?s siblings and cousins added to your joy. You played peek-a-boo and hide-and-seek and baked cookies together. If you?re looking for more exciting ways to engage with your grandchildren and enjoy your time with them to the fullest, this book is for you. One day you?ll only be a memory for your grandchildren. Make it a good one!


Your Father's Voice

Your Father's Voice
Author: Lyz Glick
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2013-09-17
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1466853174

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It seemed like just plain bad luck. On September 11, 2001, Jeremy Glick boarded United Flight 93 only because a fire at Newark Airport had prevented him from flying out the day before. That morning, he called his wife, Lyz, to tell her the plane had been hijacked and that he and a group of others were going to storm the cockpit, an effort that doomed Glick and his fellow passengers yet doubtless saved lives on the ground and instantly became known worldwide as a heroic moment of resistance. But Lyz wanted the couple's daughter, Emmy, only three months old when the plane crashed, to learn much more of her father's story than just the ending. Your Father's Voice narrates Lyz's struggle to come to grips with her husband's death in a series of letters from Lyz to Emmy that give a wrenching but clear-eyed account of Lyz's first years without Jeremy. The letters also portray the rebellious but charismatic star athlete who became Lyz's high school sweetheart, a national collegiate judo champion, and finally her husband. We see Lyz's medical ordeal as she tries to bring Emmy into the world, Jeremy's tender nurturing of the premature baby, and the agony of his final telephone call from the ill-fated plane. But it is during the first frantic months after the terrorist attack---as she fends off the media and fights to get the truth about what happened on Flight 93---that Lyz realizes that she and Jeremy are still deeply connected, that his love for her and Emmy endures and teaches. Soon Lyz can write to Emmy that she believes it was destiny, not luck, that put a world-class martial artist like Jeremy on an airplane with other men and women who were also determined to fight back. Through it all, Lyz pragmatically details the challenges of a single parent raising a daughter in the aftermath of horrific tragedy, and urges Emmy to listen for what Lyz can still hear when the wind is right: her father's voice.


When I Go Camping with Grandma

When I Go Camping with Grandma
Author: Marion Dane Bauer
Publisher: Troll Communications
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1995
Genre: Camping
ISBN: 9780816734481

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A child enjoys a camping trip with Grandma that includes hiking, canoeing, fishing, and cooking out.


Our Cup Runneth Over

Our Cup Runneth Over
Author: Herbert And Carolyn Krause
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 379
Release: 2013-03
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1481712942

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Carolyn and her husband Herbert came from two different worlds. She from a small town in West Virginia, and he from a small village in East Prussia. They each experienced a different kind of life during World War II. Herbert escaped death by the Russians, and the only act of war Carolyn saw was selling war bonds and standing in line for nylons for her mother until the telegraph came. Carolyn's father was severely injured during a raid over Tokyo and would never be the same. Herbert's family did not know if his father was dead or alive for the three years they were in a refugee camp after fleeing from the Russians.


The Minefield of Memories

The Minefield of Memories
Author: Karina Wetherbee
Publisher: Author House
Total Pages: 436
Release: 2004-03-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 1414054858

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The world knows of the horrors Hitler unleashed upon an entire race of people, but, what of the countless other lives torn apart? This is the story of one such innocent, a young Austrian boy who struggles to find meaning and hope amidst the chaos and horror of World War II. The calm of Alfie’s childhood in the heart of Sudetenland is surrounded and eventually destroyed as Hitler’s greed consumes all of Europe. Left behind by his fleeing family, Alfie is separated from all he holds dear. He sets out on a journey of survival and discovery--as agonizing loneliness, witnessed brutalities, and numbing hunger all determine to break Alfie’s faith in those around him. Alfie must navigate the many minefields, real and psychological, that lurk before him in his uncertain future and behind him in his troubled past. Even upon Alfie’s eventual escape to America, the very idea of family is thrown into question, as long buried secrets are revealed.Throughout this story of love and loyalty, war and renewal, betrayal and trust, Alfie finds that the most difficult road he faces is the beleaguered path of his own memories.


Opa

Opa
Author: Oma
Publisher: Author House
Total Pages: 163
Release: 2012-06-21
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1477201793

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Opa and Oma on their 45th wedding anniversary Opa and Oma met at a Missouri State Society Dance in October 1956 and married in August of the following year. We both have a very strong faith in God, and believe that faith with a lot of prayer has carried us both through out our life time. Opa and his family were able to make it safely through WW11, and afterward. Many families died even after the war, of starvation. His story tells you just how many times they were so close to death. Each member of Opas family survived without injury of any kind and we both believe that God was with them, keeping them safe.


Ordinary People, Turbulent Times

Ordinary People, Turbulent Times
Author: Alice Dreifuss Goldstein
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2008
Genre: German Americans
ISBN: 1434381226

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"Life was good, and promising to get ever better for the recently married Dreifuss couple and their young daughter, Alice, living in rural southwest Germany. Then HItler came to power, and their world turned upside down. This vivid biography deals with one of the transforming events of the twentieth century. As happened throughout Germany during the eight years that served as a prelude to the Holocaust, the Nazis turned the Dreifuss family members from valued friends and colleagues of their fellow villagers into an isolated, demonized minority. Even as a small child, Alice felt the impact of Nazi anti-semitism. More importantly, this story shows how strength of spirit and faith enabled the family to remain optimistic and resilient during their struggle to leave Germany and to make new lives for themselves in America"--Page 4 of cover


Great Day Coming

Great Day Coming
Author: Hope Hale Davis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 360
Release: 1994
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

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Scarcely a word about feminism...yet a feminist classic. --The Boston Globe


A Time of Silence

A Time of Silence
Author: Ingrid Epstein Elefant
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2011-03
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1452098794

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Ingrid Epstein Elefant survived the Holocaust in Germany through the kindness and generosity of non-Jews, many of whom put their own lives at risk by helping her and her mother. From a young child shielded by her parents and others from the horror going on around her, and not understanding the painful things happening to her family, Ingrid becomes a young woman struggling to adjust to a new country, and then a mature woman desperately trying to establish her own identity. The entire story is a testament to human kindness and the ability of one person to gain acceptance and to create a place for herself in a welcoming community. Ingrid's writing speaks directly to the reader's emotions, and the last part of her memoir focuses on the deep spiritual quality which suffuses and animates her life. Marim Charry, Rabbi Told with the kind of confidence and grace that comes only from years of searing self-scrutiny, A Time of Silence is Ingrid Epstein Elefant's moving account of her life-long search to find and live an authentic identity. Born in Nazi Germany to a Catholic father and Jewish mother, Ingrid spent her early childhood at the edges of war, fearful of the nightly bombing raids and zealously protective of her dearest friend, her doll Erika. Raised as a Catholic and hidden for a time by her Catholic grandparents after her father had been drafted and her mother was forced into hiding, Ingrid found herself, after the war, enveloped by her mother's Jewish family in America, miming the motions of newly learned Jewish ritual. She felt herself a fraud, a German Catholic displaced from her home, playacting the expected roles given to her by a new and foreign family. Here is the heart of Ingrid's story - a story that stretches out over decades of learning to determine for herself who she is, and of finding a way to understand the decisions her parents had made for her in the past. It is a story of love and fear, of loss and acceptance, and above all, of the healing power of narrative to help a special kind of Holocaust survivor find both self-knowledge and peace. Eve Keller, Professor Department of English Fordham University