Pickle to Pie

Capa
Ilura Press, 2007 - 251 páginas

Grossmutter said that I was squealing like a tortured mouse when she pulled me from my mother's womb. One more squalling bundle in a crib in the dim parlour. It was Grossmutter who named me Frederick Joseph Heinrich Frank Fritschenburg. Over my cradle she sang of great ancestors and past riches. Told stories of Hansel und Gretel lost in the forest, of witches and goblins and Onkel Gustav and Tante Teresa singing Auf Wiedersehen. Of tears falling on her piano that last night in Magdeburg.

Rejected by his mother at birth and raised by his Grossmutter and Grossvater, Frederick Fritschenburg, a second generation Australian of German descent, is dying in hospital. At eighty years of age Frederick recalls a life torn by two world wars and the Great Depression - a life of uncertainty and anguish, of disappointment, human frailties and estranged relationships, where nothing seems as real as the special childhood bond that existed between him and his Grossmutter.

'Pickle to Pie creates a terrific sense of place, one that lies at the intersection of two cultures but remains quintessentially Australian. A vivid and moving exploration of the immigrant experience.' - Cameron Woodhead, The Age.

'Pickle to Pie is a beautifully wrought and heartfelt exploration of family and cultural ties...' - Liam Davison, author of Soundings and The White Woman

'Pickle to Pie is colourful, funny, sad, challenging. It evokes immigrant experience in vivid and compelling detail...' - Anne Bartlett, author of Knitting

 

Índice

Secção 1_
11
Secção 2_
23
Secção 3_
45
Secção 4_
72
Secção 5_
93
Secção 6_
117
Secção 7_
143
Secção 8_
159
Secção 9_
194
Secção 10_
214
Secção 11_
233
Secção 12_
251
Secção 13_
254
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