Du er ikke logget ind
Beskrivelse
Experience life as a young girl of Lithuanian immigrant parents in New York in the 1920's. It was a time of silent movies, horses pulling coffins in the street, live poultry markets, vineyards, gaslight and Russian's tending the bee houses next door. Some things are familiar, the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, family gatherings, stern nuns in Catholic schools, and the catty comeuppances of young girls. But the differences are striking, two dollars for 16 hours work, candles on the Christmas tree, death at home from tuberculosis, and the graphic presentation in the local theater of the electrocution of Ruth Snyder. Please enjoy the history and the tender human insights that Anne offers in this book of her memoirs. About the author Anne Kulis Marcin has lived 98 years on this earth. She was born on April 7, 1920 in the South Ozone Park area of Queens, New York. Anne was the second child of Frances Waliukiewicz and George Kulis both Lithuanian emigrants who, in 1910, escaped the horrors of the Bolshevik Revolution. She attended Our Lady of Perpetual Help Grammar School and John Adams High School. She lived through the Great Depression and World War II during which she met her husband Ben Marcin. Anne now lives in San Juan Islands in Washington State where she still writes prolifically.