Lifelines: A Viennese Family's Letters from Home and Exile, 1938-1947

Fragile letters, crammed into red manila folders, had stories to tell.

Hidden for decades in the hall closet of the one-bedroom New York apartment where Pat Haim grew up, the letters found their voices again after Pat inherited them from her parents. The folders were filled with WWII-era letters, hundreds of them. They had been written to her father by his Vienna-based family as they scattered into exile in England, the United States, Australia, and beyond.

Sorting them first by writer and date, then translating the more legible handwritings, Pat began to excavate and reconstruct the lives of the remarkable people who wrote these letters during appalling times.

Through first person, real-time narratives, Lifelines gives voice to the daily survival of a family. Not a backward-looking memoir, the letters record their writers' present-tense thoughts and awareness in their own voices. They unfold a story of parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles-ordinary individuals-who heroically continued to write through traumas of separation and oppression.

Their letters were precious lifelines both for writers and recipients. Although some threads ended in tragedy, sometimes there were triumphs-escapes from Nazi-ruled Vienna, life-saving visas granted, and bittersweet reunions.

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Lifelines: A Viennese Family's Letters from Home and Exile, 1938-1947

Fragile letters, crammed into red manila folders, had stories to tell.

Hidden for decades in the hall closet of the one-bedroom New York apartment where Pat Haim grew up, the letters found their voices again after Pat inherited them from her parents. The folders were filled with WWII-era letters, hundreds of them. They had been written to her father by his Vienna-based family as they scattered into exile in England, the United States, Australia, and beyond.

Sorting them first by writer and date, then translating the more legible handwritings, Pat began to excavate and reconstruct the lives of the remarkable people who wrote these letters during appalling times.

Through first person, real-time narratives, Lifelines gives voice to the daily survival of a family. Not a backward-looking memoir, the letters record their writers' present-tense thoughts and awareness in their own voices. They unfold a story of parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles-ordinary individuals-who heroically continued to write through traumas of separation and oppression.

Their letters were precious lifelines both for writers and recipients. Although some threads ended in tragedy, sometimes there were triumphs-escapes from Nazi-ruled Vienna, life-saving visas granted, and bittersweet reunions.

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Lifelines: A Viennese Family's Letters from Home and Exile, 1938-1947

Lifelines: A Viennese Family's Letters from Home and Exile, 1938-1947

by Patricia Haim
Lifelines: A Viennese Family's Letters from Home and Exile, 1938-1947

Lifelines: A Viennese Family's Letters from Home and Exile, 1938-1947

by Patricia Haim

Hardcover

$35.00 
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Overview

Fragile letters, crammed into red manila folders, had stories to tell.

Hidden for decades in the hall closet of the one-bedroom New York apartment where Pat Haim grew up, the letters found their voices again after Pat inherited them from her parents. The folders were filled with WWII-era letters, hundreds of them. They had been written to her father by his Vienna-based family as they scattered into exile in England, the United States, Australia, and beyond.

Sorting them first by writer and date, then translating the more legible handwritings, Pat began to excavate and reconstruct the lives of the remarkable people who wrote these letters during appalling times.

Through first person, real-time narratives, Lifelines gives voice to the daily survival of a family. Not a backward-looking memoir, the letters record their writers' present-tense thoughts and awareness in their own voices. They unfold a story of parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles-ordinary individuals-who heroically continued to write through traumas of separation and oppression.

Their letters were precious lifelines both for writers and recipients. Although some threads ended in tragedy, sometimes there were triumphs-escapes from Nazi-ruled Vienna, life-saving visas granted, and bittersweet reunions.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798218455477
Publisher: Sunburst Press
Publication date: 07/14/2025
Pages: 478
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.19(d)

About the Author

Patricia Haim was born and raised in New York City. She lived in Melbourne for three years with her uncle Paul Kurz and graduated from the University of Melbourne's honors program in English language and literature. After that, she returned to the United States for graduate school at Duke University and, eventually, Notre Dame Law School. She retired after a career specializing in employment, labor, and immigration law, and lives in Bend, Oregon.
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