Escape Home: Rebuilding a Life After the Anschluss

Escape Home: Rebuilding a Life After the Anschluss

by Carrie Paterson (Editor), Charles Paterson (Author), Paul Anderson (Editor), Hensley Peterson (Editor)

Synopsis

Intimate and scholarly...Patient readers will be rewarded. An encyclopedic and epistolary family history, a eulogy for pre-Reich Vienna and an ode to midcentury modernism. -- Kirkus Reviews This jewel should not be called a book but a museum. -- Will Semler, author (Melbourne, Australia) One of the more uplifting accounts of European emigre life that I have read in a long time...It will touch you to tears right away, regardless of how many accounts of similar fates you believe to have studied and understood...What a book! -- Volker M. Welter, author and architectural historian An invaluable addition to the literature on the birth of modern Aspen. --Stewart Oksenhorn, The Aspen Times Charles Paterson (born Karl Schanzer) was only nine years old when the Nazis invaded Austria and his father, Stefan, fled with his children to avoid persecution. To assure their continued safety, the children were baptized and adopted by the Paterson family in Australia while Stefan made a harrowing escape through occupied France. It would be eight years, after much sorrow and loss, before Charles and his sister would reunite with Stefan in the United States. After Charles and Stefan settle in Aspen, Colorado, amidst the snow-capped peaks that remind them of the Austrian Alps, Stefan becomes a high school teacher known for his humor and adventure stories while Charles teaches skiing, serves as a Frank Lloyd Wright apprentice, and then builds his thesis project, the The Boomerang ski lodge. Charles lives with Stefan at The Boomerang and, as Aspen grows into a world-class ski resort, spends fifty years welcoming thousands of people to the town with Austrian warmth and gemutlichkeit. Based on archival documents and letters, together with the authors' personal reflections, Escape Home is a family memoir and a meditation on the domestic qualities of architecture, where the bonds of culture and family prove to be the true foundation for rebuilding meaningful lives and finding both security and freedom.

$21.47

Quantity

4 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 570
Publisher: DoppelHouse Press
Published: 21 Mar 2017

ISBN 10: 0997003464
ISBN 13: 9780997003468
Book Overview: Promotion to libraries and Jewish reading centers Social networking promotion using existing reviews and multi-media content generated during 2013-2014 book tours and book launches and oral history interviews YouTube channel lectures and recorded radio interviews by the authors give access to the personalities and different subjects included in the book Targeted promotion of paperback release through the large social networks of supporters who bought or reviewed the title in hardcover

Media Reviews
Intimate and scholarly... Patient readers will be rewarded. An encyclopedic and epistolary family history, a eulogy for pre-Reich Vienna and an ode to midcentury modernism. -- Kirkus Reviews This jewel should not be called a book but a museum. -- Will Semler, author (Melbourne, Australia) One of the more uplifting accounts of European emigre life that I have read in a long time... It will touch you to tears right away, regardless of how many accounts of similar fates you believe to have studied and understood... What a book! -- Volker M. Welter, author and architectural historian An invaluable addition to the literature on the birth of modern Aspen. --Stewart Oksenhorn, The Aspen Times
Author Bio
Charles Paterson: Charles Paterson was born Karl Schanzer in Vienna, Austria in 1929 and now lives in Aspen, Colorado. As a Jewish child he and his sister were adopted by the Australian Paterson family. An architectural designer, Paterson was one of the last apprentices to train under Frank Lloyd Wright. Carrie Paterson: Carrie Paterson is an artist and writer based in Los Angeles. She writes for contemporary art journals, lectures at Southern California universities and is Publisher and Editor in chief at DoppelHouse Press. Hensley Peterson is an editor based in Aspen, Colorado. Paul Anderson: Paul Anderson is a writer of books and essays. He is a columnist for The Aspen Times.