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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Natalie HessPublisher: Amsterdam Publishers Imprint: Amsterdam Publishers Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.617kg ISBN: 9789493056626ISBN 10: 9493056627 Pages: 302 Publication Date: 22 January 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsRecommendations viiIntroduction xi PART 1 HOLOCAUSTSpider Webs in my Head 3How I learned to be a Lady 7Keeping a Child 10Into the Ghetto 14Registered 17Selection 21The Boy who needed a Playmate 24Jacket Exchange, Train Ride, and Arrival 27Lice 31Hunger 34Swedish Buses 37So, What is it all about? 40Holding Time 48 PART 2 LIFE IN SWEDENSweden, The National Anthems of My Life 55On the Stairs 60Thoughts of a very Childish Sixteen-Year-Old 65Leaving 70Two Weeks at Sea 73 PART 3 NEWCOMER IN AMERICABecoming an American Girl 83Popping along in America 86School Girl, dealing with Numbers 91Of Cows and Cowards 98AMBJ 102The Hess Dress 110Sputnik and Shakespeare 118Are we there yet? 121 PART 4 LIFE IN ISRAELThe Six-Day War 129The Balabusta 147Ali and his Israeli Teacher 150 PART 5 BECOMING A WIDOWWho is Willa? 165Finality 172Who am I now? 180Sitting Shiva 188Morning Walks in Mevaseret Zion 195The Improbable Richard 200 PART 6 LIFE IN PHILADELPHIA. FINDING CONTENTMENTHappy New Year! 213Becoming a Docent 221Meeting Charles 226The Good Citizen 233Memory of Forgetting 241The Question they will invariably ask 245For Teachers and their Students 249Have an Emily Moment 259My Emily Moment 264 Some Historic Background 265Photos 267About the Author 275Questions for Discussion 277Notes 281ReviewsNatalie Hess's memoir provides an interesting read for a life filled with difficulties and overcoming. Throughout the book you are drawn into Natalie's experiences and it is impossible to put the book down until you are finished. Her journey from child to survivor to immigrant and into adulthood is a story that should be read especially in light of present day. Natalie has a story that is accessible for 8th grade to adults. I highly recommend reading this book for a glimpse into one person's experience in the Holocaust, but also what a survivor's life is like after, which is often overlooked. - Shannon Fleischman, Full Time Educator of Museum and Holocaust Education, Oregon Jewish museum and Center for Holocaust Education I finished your manuscript a couple of days ago and immediately went back to read the Holocaust section for the third time. You have a warm, comfortable style of writing. It seems to beckon the reader to come into your world. There are things about your life the world can never understand. But, there are also many things most can appreciate you verbalizing - awkwardness as a teenager, only two dresses or how to dress, not feeling accepted, feeling there is no place where you belong, etc. These things drew me into you and made you a role model who triumphs in the midst of unimaginable circumstances, and yet, walks the same walk as though we were friends and grew up together. I don't know how long it took you to write this, but the world thanks you for every word and every hour dedicated. It is imperative that no Holocaust hell should be relegated to oblivion. - Diane McNeil, Unknown Child Foundation Within the vast, ever increasing Holocaust literature Natalie Hess's autobiographical account stands out. Following the chronological sequence of events and eloquently written, often in a dialogue form, it is compelling testimony of a child survivor. At the age of 82, Natalie Hess broke the prevailing code of silence and began to tell her life story. Intertwining history and memory early childhood images are presented and connected with post-war episodes and reflections. Natalie Hess remembers the horror of the Holocaust - the survival in the Polish ghetto of Piotrow Tribunalski, the cattle train deportation to and the treatment in the women concentration camp of Ravensbruck and the arrival of the white buses in April 1945 which brought her and other inmates to Sweden. She spends some years in Sweden, moves to Israel and finally settles down in America. Reconstructing her long journey she reveals the successful professional career as language teacher and happy family life with a loving caring husband and three adorable daughters, indeed, a child survivor who experienced the Holocaust and succeeded in rebuilding her life. - Emeritus Professor Dr Konrad Kwiet, Resident Historian, Sydney Jewish Museum The style made it very readable and the humor and down to earth approach made very heavy material palatable. I was especially appreciative of the footnotes and the student questions at the end. It makes the book both an enjoyable personal read and an educational tool. - Gary Hill Author InformationBorn in Poland, Natalie Hess Is a Holocaust survivor who has lived and worked in Sweden, the United States, and Israel. She spent many years as a high school teacher in both the U.S. and Israel. She has also worked as an ESL (English as a Second Language) teacher and teacher-educator in England, Mexico, and Taiwan. She is the author and co-author of several textbooks and teacher resource books, including Finding Family (University of Michigan Press, 2011), Teaching Large Multi-level Classes (Cambridge University Press, 2011), and Stories With a Twist (Alta Book Center Publishers, 1999). Hess earned a Master of Arts Degree in Education from Harvard University and a Ph.D. in Literature from the University of Arizona, and she has worked on the faculties of Arizona University in Tucson, as well as Northern Arizona University in Yuma, Arizona where she earned a distinguished teaching award. She was married to John Hess for 54 happy years and is a proud mom of three splendid daughters and grandma of six outstanding grandchildren. At present, she is a volunteer docent at the Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia. She reads and writes both prose and poetry, loves talking with friends, and taking long walks in her adopted city. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |