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[5YP]∎ [PDF] Gratis Traveling Between the Lines Europe in 1938 eBook Rebecca McBride

Traveling Between the Lines Europe in 1938 eBook Rebecca McBride



Download As PDF : Traveling Between the Lines Europe in 1938 eBook Rebecca McBride

Download PDF  Traveling Between the Lines Europe in 1938 eBook Rebecca McBride

From May to September 1938, one year before the start of World War II, John and Margaret Randolph traveled from the U.S. to Europe. At ages 34 and 27, they were on an adventure, traveling by train, renting bicycles, and sleeping in youth hostels--a typical tour in an atypical time, in a continent on the brink of war. They traveled to Holland, Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, England, and Wales before finding passage home on a freighter.

John F. Randolph, a mathematician who had been at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, kept a daily journal of the trip. After his death, his daughter came across the journal. Knowing what took place in Germany in 1938 and what would follow throughout Europe, she began to fill in the spaces her father left blank. This book became a journey for her too.

Traveling Between the Lines Europe in 1938 eBook Rebecca McBride

Many of us discover when we become the older generation that we never really knew our parents as people, as individuals separate from their role in our lives as Mom and Dad. There are certain conversations that never happened because we were thoroughly caught up living in the established patterns of our parent/child relationships.
Then something happens. A parent dies. A letter, diary, or photograph is found and we experience a shock. Cognitive dissonance: If Mom was always good and the model of propriety, who is that man in the photo - who isn't Daddy - that must not be Mommy... did she have a twin sister? Or mystery: This letter was written from Singapore! I didn't know Dad was in Singapore in 1956. Why didn't he mention it? There are many scenarios.
Well, Rebecca McBride had this kind of experience. An opportunity to know her father and understand her parents' relationship in a new way landed on her lap. She read her father's journals from a trip to Europe he took with her mother in 1938 shortly before World War II broke out, from a period of time before she was born. In addition there were wonderful photographs to go along with the writing.
McBride could have kept the journals and photographs for her own and her family's enjoyment, but she believed there was something of value between the lines that could be appreciated by the public at large. She decided to create a book and insert her own point of view, thus broadening the scope of the writing to become more than a photo journal. Instead of simply transcribing the words and reproducing the photographs, she took it upon herself to draw the experiences into the context of both the situation in Europe at the time - made especially poignant as her parents traveled in Germany - and as a daughter who had some unresolved issues to work out, based at least partially in an essential personality conflict between her own more emotional and compassionate way of interacting with the world and her father's mathematical, analytical approach. McBride did extensive research into the period of history (fully noted), into the chronology as it related to the location and dates of her parents' travels, and into supplementary details of time and place to illuminate the entries. Her father's entries, written for his own benefit with nary a thought to future publication, often came across as cryptic.
McBride succeeded in creating a highly engrossing account of the period of time full of the minutiae of travel, but charged with emotional depth and challenging questions.

Product details

  • File Size 2917 KB
  • Print Length 220 pages
  • Publication Date November 10, 2010
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B004BSGH2M

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Traveling Between the Lines Europe in 1938 eBook Rebecca McBride Reviews


Written as an unusual hybrid of journal, journalism, and a dialog with her late parents, Rebecca McBride has managed to pull it off seamlessly. The author found her father's journal, kept as he and his young wife traveled through a Europe teetering on the edge of war in the late 1930s, and she turned it into an amazing book. I love the way the journal, the daughter's imagined conversations with her parents and her straightforward reporting of the times are all woven together. Fascinating!
An interesting concept, an adult daughter finds travel journals written by her dad as a young man when her parents visited pre-war Europe. Personally, I was more interested in the father's observations than the daughter's after-the-fact commentary. With the benefit of hindsight the daughter takes every chance to comment on what's about to happen in WW2 on every town, institution and part of life the father writes about. Yes, we know there was a war, yes we know people died, yes we know people were persecuted, but it gets a bit repetitious over and over again.
What a unique and totally fresh book. John Randolph's daughter (The Author) finds notes that her (deceased) father had made during an exciting and historic visit thru Europe just a year before the terrors of Hitler and Nazi Germany attempted to destroy it.
As usual, I will leave the 'literal' reviews to others, and give my personal feelings on this work. How many of us have wished to know more about our parents but either investigated too late or were blocked by the family itself?
You will feel the excitement as the author finds her fathers' notes. Not only does she read and research them, she actually asks him about his feelings and what he might be thinking while making entries into his journal. Her method of writing brings pre WWII history alive to the reader.
She also describes the beauty her father seen in a way that will make you feel as if you are there with him.
Don't miss this one! It is filled with emotion, love and an exciting trip made by a brilliant, young mathematician in 1938.
The author should be proud of the opportunity to present her father to us, the reader, just as I'm sure he would have been proud of her.
I read Traveling Between the Lines and connected immediately. I especially loved McBride's comments that were personally directed to her father. One could feel that it was an attempt to reconnect with him and her mother on a soul-spiritual level -- to find out more about who they really were. In that sense the book is also a moving homage to her parents. I also appreciated McBride's annotations that give the reader a historical context. Having lived in Germany (Black Forest), Switzerland and England, and having traveled all over Europe, I also enjoyed reading about those places as they were in 1938. While reading the father's entries I tried to guess what questions and queries McBride would have for him. Often I was right. The title "Traveling Between the Lines" is perfect, because there are so many different levels to the book -- and there is so much that goes on between the lines. The travelogue of John F. Randolph was written just before Europe's humanity was challenged to the utmost. Rebecca McBride, through her questions, musings and research brings back and resurrects the human element. Wonderful!
Many of us discover when we become the older generation that we never really knew our parents as people, as individuals separate from their role in our lives as Mom and Dad. There are certain conversations that never happened because we were thoroughly caught up living in the established patterns of our parent/child relationships.
Then something happens. A parent dies. A letter, diary, or photograph is found and we experience a shock. Cognitive dissonance If Mom was always good and the model of propriety, who is that man in the photo - who isn't Daddy - that must not be Mommy... did she have a twin sister? Or mystery This letter was written from Singapore! I didn't know Dad was in Singapore in 1956. Why didn't he mention it? There are many scenarios.
Well, Rebecca McBride had this kind of experience. An opportunity to know her father and understand her parents' relationship in a new way landed on her lap. She read her father's journals from a trip to Europe he took with her mother in 1938 shortly before World War II broke out, from a period of time before she was born. In addition there were wonderful photographs to go along with the writing.
McBride could have kept the journals and photographs for her own and her family's enjoyment, but she believed there was something of value between the lines that could be appreciated by the public at large. She decided to create a book and insert her own point of view, thus broadening the scope of the writing to become more than a photo journal. Instead of simply transcribing the words and reproducing the photographs, she took it upon herself to draw the experiences into the context of both the situation in Europe at the time - made especially poignant as her parents traveled in Germany - and as a daughter who had some unresolved issues to work out, based at least partially in an essential personality conflict between her own more emotional and compassionate way of interacting with the world and her father's mathematical, analytical approach. McBride did extensive research into the period of history (fully noted), into the chronology as it related to the location and dates of her parents' travels, and into supplementary details of time and place to illuminate the entries. Her father's entries, written for his own benefit with nary a thought to future publication, often came across as cryptic.
McBride succeeded in creating a highly engrossing account of the period of time full of the minutiae of travel, but charged with emotional depth and challenging questions.
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