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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Marsha FaubertPublisher: Goose Lane Editions Imprint: Goose Lane Editions Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.425kg ISBN: 9781773102757ISBN 10: 1773102753 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 21 February 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsA timeless story of resilience and survival in the face of unimaginable hardship and unspeakable evil. Armed with a cache of faded photographs and a few clues, Faubert has painstakingly unearthed a lost family history that transports readers from the labour camps of Siberia and Nazi Germany to a new life built in Canada after the Second World War. A masterclass in how to reconstruct the past and a remarkable, haunting book. - Dean Jobb, author of The Acadian Saga - 20221118 Piecing together the previously shrouded story of her Polish immigrant in-laws' past, the often-pained story of ordinary people denied ordinary lives, Marsha Faubert has created a thoroughly researched, artfully written, and deeply moving work that is almost impossible to put down. - Harold Troper, co-author of None Is Too Many - 20221118 Silence is an elusive topic, as Marsha Faubert discovers. Why did two Polish post-war refugees, Wanda, a slave labourer in Nazi Germany, and Casey, who spent his war first in a Soviet gulag and then fighting in the Polish army, never talk about their experiences? Why did their children show no interest? The answers to these questions proved elusive too. This book should be a conversation starter. - Irene Tomaszewski, editor and translator of Inside a Gestapo Prison - 20221118 With so many refugees facing similar hardships today, Wanda's War sheds light on past periods of turmoil and dislocation. As survivors pass away it falls on this generation to recover and bear witness. Faubert is a witness to the witnesses, to the many who could not speak or chose not to speak. A powerful and moving story. - Gwen Strauss, author of The Nine - 20221118 """By recounting her in-laws' stories, Faubert has humanized the suffering and tragedy of Poland's war. She evokes the nightmarish conditions of Nazi and Soviet occupation. Her readable narrative raises universal themes of memory and silence, freedom, justice and forgiveness: it is a book packed with meaning."" - Graeme Voyer - Winnipeg Free Press - 20230401 ""A timeless story of resilience and survival in the face of unimaginable hardship and unspeakable evil. Armed with a cache of faded photographs and a few clues, Faubert has painstakingly unearthed a lost family history that transports readers from the labour camps of Siberia and Nazi Germany to a new life built in Canada after the Second World War. A masterclass in how to reconstruct the past and a remarkable, haunting book."" - Dean Jobb, author of The Acadian Saga - 20221118 ""Piecing together the previously shrouded story of her Polish immigrant in-laws' past, the often-pained story of ordinary people denied ordinary lives, Marsha Faubert has created a thoroughly researched, artfully written, and deeply moving work that is almost impossible to put down."" - Harold Troper, co-author of None Is Too Many - 20221118 ""Silence is an elusive topic, as Marsha Faubert discovers. Why did two Polish post-war refugees, Wanda, a slave labourer in Nazi Germany, and Casey, who spent his war first in a Soviet gulag and then fighting in the Polish army, never talk about their experiences? Why did their children show no interest? The answers to these questions proved elusive too. This book should be a conversation starter."" - Irene Tomaszewski, editor and translator of Inside a Gestapo Prison - 20221118 ""With so many refugees facing similar hardships today, Wanda's War sheds light on past periods of turmoil and dislocation. As survivors pass away it falls on this generation to recover and bear witness. Faubert is a witness to the witnesses, to the many who could not speak or chose not to speak. A powerful and moving story."" - Gwen Strauss, author of The Nine - 20221118" Author InformationMarsha Faubert is a Toronto-based lawyer with a lengthy history of public service in the administrative justice system in Ontario. She has worked as a litigator, an arbitrator, an adjudicator of appeals in workplace injury and disease claims, and as the director of a provincial tribunal. Wanda’s War is her first book. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |