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Description of a life rich enough to fill several lifetimes.

BEST OF THE RUSSIAN CLASSICS

Presidential Apology"Now is the time for turning. The leaves are beginning to turn from green to red to orange. The birds are beginning to turn and are heading once more toward the south. The animals are beginning to turn to storing their food for the winter. For leaves, birds and animals, turning comes instinctively. But for us, turning does not come so easily. It takes an act of will for us to make a turn. It means breaking old habits. It means admitting that we have been wrong, and this is never easy. It means losing face. It means starting all over again. And this is always painful. It means saying I am sorry. It means recognizing that we have the ability to change. These things are terribly hard to do.
"But unless we turn, we will be trapped forever in yesterday's ways. Lord help us to turn, from callousness to sensitivity, from hostility to love, from pettiness to purpose, from envy to contentment, from carelessness to discipline, from fear to faith. Turn us around, O Lord, and bring us back toward you. Revive our lives as at the beginning, and turn us toward each other, Lord, for in isolation there is no life."


Australian immigration story now on the internetThough now out of print, the book has been posted electronically on the internet at [website]
Here is an excerpt from the Foreword:
"Australia's history has always been an interesting one. But the arrival of over 5.5 million people from so many different lands in the years since 1945 has added immeasurably to its fascination. The fascination derives in part from the past experiences of settlers, which flow on by oral and other tradition to current and succeeding generations. These earlier experiences become part of individual and collective group consciousness in a diverse and varied society.
The General Langfitt Story combines excellently the extraordinary background account of a group of displaced persons, mainly women and children, from Poland who arrived in Australia in 1950, and their subsequent experience in Australia.
The harshness of the life of some immigrants, such as the General Langfitt Group, before arriving in Australia, is not fully realised or adequately documented. The stories of survival of those in the group who were deported from Poland to work in remote labour camps in the Soviet Union, are nothing short of remarkable. And it is important for Australian history, and the broader record of human endeavour and endurance, that these stories be told.
Maryon Allbrook and Helen Cattalini have very sensitively collected the stories of some of those who were part of what they call the 'terrible history' of the General Langfitt Group. Their account makes riveting reading, and serves as a lasting testimony to the bravery of those who underwent these cataclysmic events."


SEVERAL CURRENT REVIEWS:YEVGENIA NIKOLAEVNA MAYOROVA, Herzen Pedagogical Institute, ST. PETERSBURG
Your book makes one think of a huge documentary photograph taken with a long exposure for many years, almost two human lifetimes. It is not a family chronicle or a history of a single part of a family's life; it is simply a story, a story that appears through two human souls, a story that is reflected in letters, where letters are mixed with tears, words with pain, facts with tragedy, where people are not considered as representatives of two different political systems, where the search for similarities is more important than the search for differences, because the main characters of this story are brothers.
SVETLANA ROZOVSKY, Professor of Russian Studies, University of Hartford:
Thank you very much for the wonderful book. I enjoyed it a lot! The genre of the book is perfect and very up-to-date. Every line sounds so realistic to me. It is impossible to express myself and all my feelings the book aroused in me. I would be very happy to invite you to speak to my Russian Studies class.......
BRIAN JOHNSON, Asst. Prof. Doctoral Candidate Russian Studies, Boston College:
I finally had a chance to read your manuscript The Genes of Gregoria. This is not meant to flatter you, but the work is brilliant. It covers so much ground, yet it claims it's humanity and stimulates the intellect at the same time. When I picked it up I figured that I would read two letters and finish the book over the next couple of days, however, I was hooked after the first twenty pages. The book would be of immense value as a teaching aid in a variety of uses on the college level.


Amazing short stories

A prized addition to Judaic Studies and Holocaust Studies

Great review book.

A clear, concise and even witty study

most comprehensive analysis of Gorbachev's period