Last Waltz in Vienna
by:
George Clare (author)
On February 26, 1938, 17-year-old Georg Klaar took his girlfriend Lisl to his first ball at the Konzerthaus. His family was proudly Austrian; they were also Jewish, and two weeks later came the German Anschluss. This incredibly affecting account of Nazi brutality towards the Jews includes a...
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On February 26, 1938, 17-year-old Georg Klaar took his girlfriend Lisl to his first ball at the Konzerthaus. His family was proudly Austrian; they were also Jewish, and two weeks later came the German Anschluss. This incredibly affecting account of Nazi brutality towards the Jews includes a previously unpublished post-war letter from the author’s uncle to a friend who had escaped to Scotland. This moving epistle passes on the news of those who had survived and the many who had been arrested, deported, murdered, or left to die in concentration camps, and those who had been orphaned or lost their partners or children. It forms a devastating epilogue to what has been hailed as a classic of holocaust literature.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780330490771 (033049077X)
Publish date: May 4th 2007
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
Pages no: 288
Edition language: English
Thumbed through this, and appeared a bit dull to my dim and impatient eyes. Will have to go back to Schorske. Others may like this. Family memoirs of an Austrian Jew, a long-time newspaper (?) editor on Fleet Street, starting with his great-grandfather, Hermann (b. 1812), and ending with the ca...
From the start you realise that this story is going to have a tragic end and I found it most touching when the author mentioned with regret the fact that he had never been given the chance to relate to his parents as an adult.But in fact this story is not really about the Klaar family in WWII and he...