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No RNo Royal Road

 

No Royal Road

 by Julianna C. Adler

 

 

ISBN: 1-932303-89-8

172 pages

Trade paperback

6" x 9"

Autobiography/

history

 

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 $13.95

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Hardcover

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About the Book

        

   A glimpse into the efforts of ordinary people trying to live ordinary lives under extraordinary circumstances.

He started to recite a patriotic poem by Petöfi titled Song of Our Nation (Nemzeti Dal), a call to arms during the 1848 revolution and likely to stir nationalistic sentiments just as strong a century later—

                        Arise Magyars. Your Homeland is calling.

The time is now. Now, or never.

We can be slaves, or we can be free.

That is the question. Make your choices.

             The crowd listened, then joined in, repeating the well-known refrain after each stanza—"We swear by the God of the Magyars that we won't be slaves any more!"—each raising their right arm, hand in a fist with the index and middle fingers pointing to the sky, just as their ancestors did little more than a century earlier.

 I looked up and noticed the statue's right arm raised in exactly the same           position . . . Something significant was happening and I was a participant as well as a witness to these events.

Jumping for her life from a moving train to escape Communist repression following the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, Julie takes a journey to freedom. From her birth in the late 1930s in Budapest, Hungary, through the portrayal of her family’s fight for survival, Julie must endure persecution by the Nazis, the ravaging effects of the Second World War, and discrimination under a repressive Communist dictatorship. The revolution unfolds and reaches its inevitable, and tragic, conclusion.

Against this setting, young Julie hopes, dreams, fights for existence, and struggles for autonomy. Her astonishing life, like so many others, was uniquely shaped by 20th century history. With the fiftieth anniversary of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution rapidly approaching, this poignant tale is timely reading—lest we forget.                           

 

About the Author

The author, writing under the penname, Julianna C. Adler, is a recognized educator with a Ph.D. in Mathematics. Having made her escape to Montreal, Canada, she eventually settled in the Philadelphia area. Her career in education encompassed nearly thirty years in high schools and colleges. In 1991, she received the Presidential Award of Excellence in Science and Mathematics Teaching from President George W. H. Bush.

 

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