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No Matter Where I am, I See the Danube

Autobiography

Thomas Kabdebo author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Phaeton Publishing Limited

Published:30th Nov '11

Should be back in stock very soon

No Matter Where I am, I See the Danube cover

Born to a prosperous family in 1930s Hungary, Dr Tom KABDEBO was a schoolboy in the post-war Stalin years when ten percent of Hungarian men (including his father and uncle) were sentenced to prison and to the loss of all possessions. To pay for his education, and to help support his stepmother and siblings, he worked at labouring jobs, including underground in a coal mine where the temperature was 40 C. In 1956, as a student in Budapest, he took part in the Hungarian Revolution - his diary of those few extraordinary days is reproduced in this book. Because of his involvement, he had to flee the country, along with 200,000 others. The book includes a Foreword by Arpad Goncz, President of Hungary 1990-2000, in which he writes of the author: 'He was rendered cosmopolitan by Hungarian history. His homeland was twice trodden by occupying armies, and as a consequence hundreds of thousands of its people were forced to flee their country, making their living elsewhere in the world. They were scholars, physical workers, artists, or, as it happens: writers, like Kabdebo, who had moved around the world, before finding Ireland, his real second home. Ireland is a watchtower, wherefrom he could, perhaps, see his country more sharply than from nearby.'

' - he witnessed many traumatic historical episodes during his life and his account of his part in the Rising is gripping. His is one of those lives that serve as a European history lesson.'[ - BOOKS IRELAND, 2012]. -- ' - evokes the old settled life of the Hungary of his ancestors and parents, but for himself Hungary under the Communists after World War II took on a different aspect. Like so many of his contemporaries, he fled west after the collapse of the 1956 rising, leading for some years the life of a wandering intellectual before settling in Ireland, - this book provides vivid insights into the convulsions of recent Eastern European history, changes which many suspect may not yet be at an end.'[ - THE IRISH CATHOLIC JOURNAL]. -- ' - Kabdebo's first-hand experience of the often cruel reality of life in Central and Eastern Europe after World War II, and of the hardships (as well as the infinite possibilities) of life as a refugee, has been captured unforgettably in this compelling, deeply honest book.'[ - HUNGARIAN NEWS AGENCY (MTI)].

  • Short-listed for European Book Prize 2012

ISBN: 9781908420046

Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 21mm

Weight: unknown

216 pages

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