Laughter Wasn't Rationed : A Personal Journey Through Germany's World Wars and Postwar Years
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Laughter Wasn't Rationed : A Personal Journey Through Germany's World Wars and Postwar Years
Used Book in Good Condition
This is the real life story of an ordinary woman raised in extraordinary times. Born in WWI, Dorothea v.S. Lawson witnessed it all -- the rise and fall of Hitler and his Nazi Party, WWII and the Berlin Wall. While she had a relatively care-free youth, life went downhill quickly.
Her first-hand account includes the air raids and intense bombing of Berlin, the food rationing and ever-present hunger with 8-hour long food hunting trips to farmers in the countryside. Her description of the Soviet invasion in Berlin will be an eye-opener for many. And then came the American occupation where she worked as a cook at her confiscated in-law's house, which was turned into an officers' mess. Except she didn't know how to cook, and what on earth was an egg sunny side up?
Her life is full of historical facts, but brings out the ordinary citizen perspective not found in history books, including many jokes about the Third Reich that were once punishable by imprisonment or death. And along the way she gives the reader a dose of German culture. Her stories demonstrate that war unites as much as it divides and that history is embedded in the lives of individuals, not in textbooks. And throughout, the human spirit prevails -- since laughter wasn't rationed.