Advantages: Their lives are worth remembering Disadvantages: Their lives are over
This review was first written in response to a challenge for people to talk about their grandparents, now updated in the light of new material from my mother's papers. Unfortunately, the old photos haven't taken very well.
Albert and Edith
"Albert courted all my girls and then picked on poor Edith," my great-grandfather on that side of the family used to say.
In writing about my grandparents, it is tempting to start with Edith, the one I knew best and loved most, but she would have thought it quite wrong to take precedence over her husband.
Albert probably thought it was about time he had a few things his own way. The life into which he was born was a harsh one. He was the eldest son of a working family in a small mill-town on the moors ...
Advantages: Superb characters, great use of theme, very humorous Disadvantages: None in particular.
the drawing rooms of illustrious families. Everyone is bound by tradition and even Newland, who is every inch the modern gentleman, bows to it once he is married, deciding that it requires too much effort to allow his wife to live his declaration that women - like men - should be free. Naturally, hypocrisy is an integral part of society.
There is a wistful side to The Age of Innocence, with an edge of regret that (thankfully) doesn't creep into nostalgia. To wonder what might have been is a huge part of human experience and a major theme in this novel; it's woven in subtly throughout, showing Edith Wharton's great writing skill. Indeed, The Age of Innocence won Wharton the 1921 Pulitzer Prize for literature - making her the first woman to be awarded it. Although this is her probably her most famous work, Edith Wharton also wrote The House ...
Advantages: A completely absorbing read Disadvantages: A harrowing story
The Nazi Officer's Wife
Recently I have read several books set during World War II in Germany, particularly about the Holocaust.
The Nazi Officer's Wife: How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust -was a book that I had not previously heard of, but was recommended it by the same person who recommended I read 'The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas', so I thought that I would give it a try.
Wow! I was totally blown away by Edith Hahn, and all that she went through. I thought that it was an extremely thought provoking book, and one of the best chronicles about the Holocaust period that I have read
This book is an autobiographical book by Edith Hahn, written with Susan Dworkin.
It is dedicated to Edith's mother, Klothilde Hahn, and in the preface Edith tells us that she has written the book at the request of he daughter. She ...