Free PDF , by Norman Eisen

Rabu, 21 Oktober 2015

Free PDF , by Norman Eisen

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, by Norman Eisen

, by Norman Eisen


, by Norman Eisen


Free PDF , by Norman Eisen

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, by Norman Eisen

Product details

File Size: 19279 KB

Print Length: 398 pages

Publisher: Crown (September 4, 2018)

Publication Date: September 4, 2018

Sold by: Random House LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B07911KHX6

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#39,662 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

"The Last Palace" tells the story of Eastern Europe, more specifically Czechoslovakia (later the Czech Republic) in a unique way through the story of a very large house that was build by a very assimilated Jewish man in the late 1920's and early 1930's as fascism was on the rise. It seems clear that there were two groups of people in Prague who hated the house, the anti-Semites who hated anything that was built by someone Jewish and everyone else who hated the monstrosity. Overlaying this story is the story of the author's mother who grew up outside of Prague in an Orthodox Jewish family who it seems had few survivors after the Holocaust. The author describes through subterfuge of the US ambassador immediately at the end of World War II how the house became the property of the US government and the official home of the ambassador (which he eventually was, as well under, President Obama). A major cameo role is that of the late Shirley Temple Black who was also for a time the US ambassador in Prague. The story is told with appropriate detail and interest - even telling us of the role of the Nazi leader in Czechoslovakia in preserving the house (a good Nazi, or perhaps not among the worst?). The only thing lacking from this what is essentially a biography of a house, seemingly the last such house build in Europe, hence the title of the book, would have been more pictures of the actual house and its contents, ideally in color. Highly recommended for many reasons, not the least of all, is a look of how the highly assimilated and wealthy Jews were also struck down by the Holocaust. His mother's thoughts on her native country when he was appointed ambassador there certainly provide a bit of levity wrapping around a certain truth.

The city of Prague is geographically in the middle of what we used to call "Eastern Europe". The city, now the capital of the Czech Republic, has long been a magical, mystical place and its history is pretty much the history of the whole area. I am half-Czech, like former US Ambassador Norman Eisen, but my family immigrated to the US three or four generations ago. He has a more immediate connection with the country as his mother was a survivor of the Holocaust. Eisen's mother left Czechoslovakia in Hitler's railroad cars as a young woman and her son returned as the United States Ambassador to the Czech Republic in the Obama Administration.Norman Eisen has written an unbelievably interesting book about one house, two families, three US ambassadors, and countless others who were involved in the last 100 years of history. He takes the reader through four - or is it five? - political systems which controlled and, in some cases, oppressed the Czech people.Many people reading this review will know about the famous house in the Czech/Moravian city of Brno. Known as the Vila Tugendhat, the Mies-designed house was built in the late 1920's by a wealthy Jewish family, the Tugendhats. The house is now a Unesco World Heritage site and was the subject of a work of fiction, "The Glass Room", by British author Simon Mawrer. But less well-known is a fabulous palace built in Prague around the same time, by Otto Petschek. Like the Tugendhats, the Petschek family fled Europe in the 1930's. The palace was left behind and was eventually used by the United States as an official residence both before WW2 and after. During the war, the house was used by a German general, Rudolf Toussaint.Eisen writes about Toussaint and the German occupation, post-WW2 ambassador Laurence Steinhardt, who tried to settle the Russian/US/Czech political and military crunch , and lastly, Shirley Temple Black. Black was in Prague during the 1968 "uprising" and returned in the late 1980's, presiding over the Velvet Revolution as our ambassador. Scattered through the book is the story of Frieda Eisen, her family, and her recollections of the Czechoslovakia she knew...and the one she was afraid of. Norman Eisman is a masterful writer. His book, while long, was a pleasure to read. I hope it's issued also in Audible.

Told through the history of one fascinating building, now the American Ambassador residence in PragueHighly evocative - brought back many memories of my days in Eastern Europe in the 90’sEisen’s mother must be pleased too, that her son succeeded in posting her much-needed warnings

This eye-opening view of an historical monument in Prague is riveting. The Shirley Temple Black episode is incredible, and the author's deft weaving of his own personal story through the last century in Prague is really something to behold. One of my favorite reads in a long time!

I enjoyed reading this outstanding book detailing the history of the Palace built by a German- Jewish business man and banker. Following the owners escape,the palace had different occupants including Germans, Soviets, and after the war it became an American Embassy. The author also discussed important events of Czechoslovakia and the Czek Republic from 1918 to 2014, combined with the life of his mother who survived the holocaust,went to Israel and ended up in America. I highly recommend this book,even for those (like me) who are familiar with the turbulent history of Czechoslovakia.

This book is fascinating from start to finish. Both a personal account, a page-turner and an in-depth history book. All of the chapters are full of new information and new accounts about the history of Czechoslovakia. I could not stop reading.

Half way through and have yet to read personal accounts or recollections of life during this turbulent and important time. The long section about Rudolf Toussaint had little to do with the house other than as one of its inhabitants. No incentive to continue. An inert house can only be interesting 358 pages if it's telling a story about human lives. Very disappointing as I had high hopes for a genre I normally love.

Interesting portrayal of a country through the history of one of its finer mansionsSurprisingly fails to mention that Prague's old Jewish quarter remained intact rather than was destroyed in WW II because the Nazis wished to preserve it as a museum of an extinct people.

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