Dear Martl, A companion to the book Dear Hanna

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Dear Martl, A companion to the book Dear Hanna by Rudolf A. Zimmer, Rudolf A. Zimmer
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Rudolf A. Zimmer ISBN: 9780994085283
Publisher: Rudolf A. Zimmer Publication: May 3, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Rudolf A. Zimmer
ISBN: 9780994085283
Publisher: Rudolf A. Zimmer
Publication: May 3, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Dear Martl is based on Hanna’s journal and on letters she wrote to her husband, Martl, on the Eastern Front during World War II. While in Dear Hanna we see through Martl’s eyes the experience of a man who has been forced to participate in a treacherous odyssey through many countries, we see in Dear Martl the trials and tribulations of an insular domestic scene on the home front.
Hanna’s journal describes her growing up during World War I and the working conditions during the following lean years. She falls in love with and marries Martl. They open a café and pastry shop in 1930. With the rise of the Nazi party in 1933, they were pressured to join the Party, which for Martl’s conscience as a pacifist was impossible. Thus they were subjected to harassment and boycotts of their business, which forced them to close it, leave town, and move to Erfurt, where Martl found employment.
Blacklisted by the Nazi Party, Martl is called up in 1941, much too early at thirty-eight years and a father of three children. He is marched with eighteen-to-twenty-five-year-old men to fight in Russia. Hanna’s letters to her soulmate Martl are full of longing and sadness, but never despair. They deal with the struggles and anguish of women who had to deal, without the help of an extended family, with raising children and rationing life’s necessities; frequent air raids; and the almost constant anxiety of losing their loved ones.
Finally, from Hanna’s journal entries we learn of Martl’s save return after four years of absence; the struggle to survive after the war; the extreme shortage of food and life’s necessities; and the eventual rebuilding of a successful pastry business and café.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Dear Martl is based on Hanna’s journal and on letters she wrote to her husband, Martl, on the Eastern Front during World War II. While in Dear Hanna we see through Martl’s eyes the experience of a man who has been forced to participate in a treacherous odyssey through many countries, we see in Dear Martl the trials and tribulations of an insular domestic scene on the home front.
Hanna’s journal describes her growing up during World War I and the working conditions during the following lean years. She falls in love with and marries Martl. They open a café and pastry shop in 1930. With the rise of the Nazi party in 1933, they were pressured to join the Party, which for Martl’s conscience as a pacifist was impossible. Thus they were subjected to harassment and boycotts of their business, which forced them to close it, leave town, and move to Erfurt, where Martl found employment.
Blacklisted by the Nazi Party, Martl is called up in 1941, much too early at thirty-eight years and a father of three children. He is marched with eighteen-to-twenty-five-year-old men to fight in Russia. Hanna’s letters to her soulmate Martl are full of longing and sadness, but never despair. They deal with the struggles and anguish of women who had to deal, without the help of an extended family, with raising children and rationing life’s necessities; frequent air raids; and the almost constant anxiety of losing their loved ones.
Finally, from Hanna’s journal entries we learn of Martl’s save return after four years of absence; the struggle to survive after the war; the extreme shortage of food and life’s necessities; and the eventual rebuilding of a successful pastry business and café.

More books from Biography & Memoir

Cover of the book The Color of War by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Nobody’s Son: All Alex ever wanted was a family of his own by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Spirit Builders by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Wake Me at Three by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book The River Runs Salt, Runs Sweet: A Young Woman's Story of Love, Loss and Survival by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book With One Shot by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book It's All About the Bike by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book The River Queen by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Into a Raging Sea by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Clough by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Esther Eneutseak et sa fille Nancy Columbia by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Les Derniers Entretiens by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book The Real Warren Buffett by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Hunting Trips of a Ranchman and The Wilderness Hunter by Rudolf A. Zimmer
Cover of the book Pat’s India by Rudolf A. Zimmer
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy