How High The Larks Fly
Two more prison camps await her and her family, and the story of these experiences will enthrall the reader. Using her talent as a pianist and singer, Ruth survives, and a blossoming love story, which is absolutely forbidden, becomes the pivotal reason for the rest of her life, leaving the reader breathless with emotion and stunned with amazement.
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About The Book
This is the amazing story of Ruth Lindenau, a young girl who came from Tiegenort, a lovely little village in what was then West Prussia, now Poland. It is a story of profound courage and bravery during and after WWII, the story of a person who survived three separate prison camps in her life and how her talent and courage kept her going. Her harrowing experiences shaped her character and personality, but always her courage saved her.
Snatched from her family’s loving care at age 13, Ruth was sent along with a school friend to a camp far from home, where sixty-five other girls were being indoctrinated into the ways of Hitler’s Third Reich. Starved of food, of affection, of all family contact, these young girls were severely punished and brainwashed. Eventually Ruth was able to escape. It was a time when Germany was about to lose the war, and after only a week of freedom, Ruth has to again escape with her entire village to Denmark on the frozen Baltic Sea. Two more prison camps await her and her family, and the story of these experiences will enthrall the reader. Using her talent as a pianist and singer, Ruth survives, and a blossoming love story, which is absolutely forbidden, becomes the pivotal reason for the rest of her life, leaving the reader breathless with emotion and stunned with amazement.
After only a week of freedom, Ruth has to again escape with her entire village to Denmark on the frozen Baltic Sea. Two more prison camps await her and her family, and the story of these experiences will enthrall the reader. Using her talent as a pianist and singer, Ruth survives, and a blossoming love story, which is absolutely forbidden, becomes the pivotal reason for the rest of her life, leaving the reader breathless with emotion and stunned with amazement.
Chapters
Pages
This story puts life in perspective during these current perilous and trying times that we live in. I highly recommend reading this wonderful book. Christine manages brilliantly to capture Ruth’s ordeal in a world turned upside down. She clearly depicts the story of her strong, never wavering spirit in the face of great adversity. Well done Christine! Thank you for creating such a wonderful story about resilience and strength. I will never forget this story.
Barbara Ranalli
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reviewed in USA 26 October 26, 2020
What’s inside
Chapter 1 – Extracts
As they scrambled up the bank the familiar large patch of grass could clearly be seen. The sunshine had turned it into wondrous shades of yellow, indigo and emerald green; and by the time the girls were halfway towards reaching it, they could already smell the flowers. Their fragrance was almost intoxicating. Violets grew all over this part of the slope in large thick clumps; probably because after the long Northern winter the sun arrived there first and melted the snow. This was the spot the girls were heading for; as far as they were concerned it was the most beautiful place on earth.
Living in that region of Europe, so close to Russia, the inhabitants grew used to the cold climate and learned, in fact, to enjoy it. In the winter months, all the children in the village, including Brigitte and Ruth, dressed warmly in woolen hats, scarves and mittens, and dragged their colorful sleds down Landestrasse to this, the highest spot in the vicinity, where they spent hours sliding up and down the snow laden slope. For the children, especially the small ones, it was a huge hill, and during the endless cold weeks it provided them with entertainment from dawn to dusk. For Ruth and Brigitte though, Springtime was when they most loved being there, and they could hardly contain their enthusiasm when the sun appeared on that Spring morning to beckon them back again.
Running and scrambling up the sweet-smelling bank, Ruth and Brigitte finally reached ‘their spot,’ their little part of paradise where they lay down on their backs in the springing, yielding, sun-splashed grass and listened to the busy chirruping and twittering of nesting birds as they flew about collecting twigs and dry grasses for their new nests. Nature’s sounds filled the air. The bucolic, peaceful mooing of cows grazing in meadows echoed all around, while the mesmerizing sound of buzzing bees and insects amongst the violets mingled with the exquisite songs of the nesting birds. For a short while at least, the two girls were transported into a world of delight; where ugly sounds did not exist, and bad things did not happen.
Shading their eyes and squinting in the sunlight, they deeply inhaled the heady perfume of violets in the warm air and gazed upwards at the great dome of heaven high above them to watch a pair of larks perform delirious soaring cartwheels in the sky.
“Look how high the larks fly.” Said Brigitte, breaking their silence with a tinge of envy in her voice, “It must feel so good to be able to fly high up above the fields to another place, where nobody gets hurt and there is no fighting or killing.”
Only six months prior to that day, the German Army had unleashed an artillery bombardment on Danzig, a town the girls knew well. They were not aware of what had exactly happened when the soldiers marched into Danzig, but they were given to understand that bad people from other countries were coming to attack them, and that their German soldiers would keep everyone safe.
Six months after that terrible day both girls were, of course, aware that their country was at war, but they were not at all sure why. Everyone they knew was given to understand that whatever was happening in the surrounding area was for the good of all the German people, and that for this they should be thankful. During the past weeks they had heard many times the sounds of explosions and the ‘rat-a-tat-tat’ of armaments echoing through the valleys around Tiegenort; and they and their parents had not been able to go outside when night fell because of the signs posted around the village which said, ‘Do Not Travel Anywhere at Night Because the Enemy Can See You.’
Six months after that terrible day both girls were, of course, aware that their country was at war, but they were not at all sure why. Everyone they knew was given to understand that whatever was happening in the surrounding area was for the good of all the German people, and that for this they should be thankful. During the past weeks they had heard many times the sounds of explosions and the ‘rat-a-tat-tat’ of armaments echoing through the valleys around Tiegenort; and they and their parents had not been able to go outside when night fell because of the signs posted around the village which said, ‘Do Not Travel Anywhere at Night Because the Enemy Can See You.’
They, and everyone with whom they had come into contact during their short lives, had been told to be very afraid of any soldiers other than their own German ones; who had so far been the only soldiers to enter their village. So apart from being afraid of the ‘Unknown Enemy,’ the girls had been somewhat shielded from the harsh realities of the situation their country was in.
Their lives revolved around attending church and school, both of which they loved; as much as they loved life in their village. The very spot they lay on was, to them, a safe place, since they had already used this sloping part of the dam as a refuge. Several times whilst cycling home in that vicinity, when they had heard the sound of air-raid warnings they had hidden for what seemed like hours, crouching beside their bicycles underneath the hill of the dam, hoping that the bombs of the enemy would not drop over their beloved village. The village which protected their homes, their families and, they trusted, their lives.
© 2019 CHRISTINE HAMER HODGES 8/11/2019
HOW HIGH THE LARKS FLY
About the author
Author of two biographies, an autobiography, a cookbook, a blogger on food for all, a passionate wife, loving Mother, and Grandmother.
How High the Larks Fly is Christine’s second biography. Born in the UK, she has had a home in the USA for forty-five years, and is a very proud American. She has also lived in Stuttgart, Germany, and Brussels, Belgium, and she speaks both German and French. She is a cordon bleu cook, and enjoys cooking dishes that have originated from countries all around the world.
Her first book, The Opening Act, was about Augie and Margo Rodrigues, the incredible dancing couple who made the mambo dance famous back in the 1950’s in New York’s Palladium. They went on to become the highest paid dancers in the world, opening acts for numerous performers, including Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland, Sammy Davis Jr and Liberace.
Christine has also written her autobiography, If Heaven Had a Flavor, soon to be published.
She lives in Florida with her husband Ken, and has two sons, Matthew and Daniel, and two grandsons, Charlie and William.
Christine Hamer-Hodges
Available books
How High The Larks Fly
The Opening Act
If Heaven Had A Flavor
Upcoming book!
If Heaven Had
A Flavor
Reflective and thoughtful recollections of childhood memories and growing up in South West England, particularly the lovely, distinct city of Bath. This is a vivid, moving, at times very entertaining yet poignant story. Don’t miss this account of life in Post War Britain: Christine Hamer-Hodges’ beautiful Autobiography.
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