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Cynthia currently lives in Florida, but was born in New Rochelle, New York. She has always loved writing. She had written for some magazines 40-50 years ago. Writing has helped her deal with situations. She has experienced several challenges in life and was able to get through it by putting her thoughts and feelings into words.
SAVING GENERAL PATTON is a story inspired by events of World War ll, Pearl Harbor. The era of nuclear weapons that led the world to Cold war. The story starts with the mobilization and training of General Patton's tank forces in the Mojave Desert. Patton's mission, in part, was to defeat the German General Rommel, aka The Desert Fox, in North Africa.
In this book, the author gives readers a glimpse at how an 11 year old boy with cerebral palsy is living positively. Meeting Masha in this book will leave you with a whole new perspective about life. Maybe there is nothing to complain or wallow about in life. Or maybe there are life lessons that are supposed to teach us something, or help us be better. It will inspire care givers educators to be open minded and empathetic in their practice when caring and addressing health needs of children with cerebral palsy and disabilities. It will teach children and youth to be best buddies and supportive of their peers with physical disabilities. It will remind families the importance of family support and above all trusting and yielding to the one who is above all things - God.
This is a historical fiction novel about the 1968 Jewish exile from Poland. In 1968, the Polish Communist government started an anti-Semitic action under the pretext that the Polish Jews were taking the Israeli side in 1967 Sixth-Day War. The Communists "e;encouraged"e; the Jews to leave the country. The encouragement came in the form of firing Jews from their job, expelling them from their universities, or generally humiliating them. Approximately two-thirds of the Polish Jews left for Israel, the USA, or Scandinavia. In 1968, there were only tiny remnants of the once largest European Jewish community. Out of approximately thirty thousand Jews, the twenty thousand left and their citizenship was renounced. Those were the survivors of the Holocaust or their children. This put a stain of shame, which is hard to erase, on the Polish Communist government. The story of this exile of 1968 is told by a doctor who left for the USA and is engrossed in an obsessive love for a young Polish-Jewish woman living in France.
The non-fiction book, "e;Life Under Tyranny"e; provides historical information about life under a tyrannical government. Newly available released documents from Ukrainian Archives in Odessa, Ukraine, detail the atrocities Soviet leaders Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin perpetrated on ethnic Germans living in Ukraine, covering the years from the Russian Revolution to the beginning of World War II. Goldade, with the assistance of associates in Odessa, Ukraine, has retrieved numerous documents from Ukrainian archives covering this dark era. Peter Goldade's Life Under Tyranny sheds new light on Soviet confiscation of property, deprivations inflicted, and the kangaroo courts that sentenced untold numbers of people to prison, hard labor, gulags-or execution.
Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev og få rabatter og inspirasjon til din neste leseopplevelse.
Ved å abonnere godtar du vår personvernerklæring.