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81. Frontier Photographer; Stanley
$25.00
82. Remembering Our Home: Healing
$25.00
83. Computers Won't Hurt You...Really
 
84. India's hurt, and other addresses,
85. Vamperotica #1 December 1994 Adult
$6.95
86. The Indian Frontier, 1763-1846
$4.99
87. Power to Hurt: THE VIRTUES OF
88. The Yeast Connection - A Guide
 
89. Report of the Investigations of
 
$5.95
90. New Pa. workers' comp. law hurts
 
$28.32
91. Tucker's Last Stand
$1.35
92. Dear God, It Hurts!": Comfort
93. Hurt
 
94. Hurt, Baby, Hurt
 
$9.95
95. Internal investigations: what
 
$9.95
96. This shot won't hurt.(LETTERS
 
97. My Hurt Is Over
$4.99
98. Survival Kit for the Stranded:
 
$5.95
99. Survival kit for the stranded:
$20.63
100. At Leningrad's Gates: The Combat

81. Frontier Photographer; Stanley J. Morrow's Dakota Years.
by Wesley R. Hurt, William Lass
 Hardcover: Pages (1956)

Asin: B001M4DPSC
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82. Remembering Our Home: Healing Hurts & Receiving Gifts from Conception to Birth
by William Emerson, Dennis Linn, Matthew Linn
Paperback: 146 Pages (1999-11)
list price: US$14.95 -- used & new: US$25.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0809139014
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Sure to provoke both intense interest and controversy is this book by the best-selling Linns and their co-author William Emerson, a pioneer in the field of healing birth trauma. This cutting-edge work explains how we can be injured emotionally and spiritually while still in the womb--forming a "template" for how we interpret later hurts. The good news is that we can be healed of these injuries even as adults. This is an extraordinary new area of research, rooted in embryological evidence as well as in anecdotal reports of birth regression. The authors believe a paradigm shift is occurring in psychology: the recognition that a child has a fully conscious spirit at the moment of conception, capable of being hurt but also capable of being healed. The ultimate healing, which can come even in adulthood, comes with remembering "home," remembering that we all come from the heart of God before our entry to the world. The exercises, meditations, and healing games presented here can be used on one's self or one's children, alone or in groups. The book is a unique resource for birth or adoptive parents, pediatricians, therapists, and anyone in need of personal healing. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (3)

5-0 out of 5 stars A Hidden Gem
This book is such a hidden gem. It is quite unpretentious, but fulfills a need that many therapists don't even perceive or know how to address. So many of my clients struggle with lack of attuned early parenting. For many, their parents still have difficulty being supportive. This slender volume provides a way to help clients understand that they have "archetypal parents"--ones that don't fail them the way their human ones do. It can be such a support to feel the love of an archetypal parent--and so necessary. Don't let the Christican symbols used in the book turn you away; all spiritual traditions have these same figures--just with different names and stories. Everyone who enters therapy would be well served to read this book--and get their therapists to read it as well. It is also a great book for conscientious parents to read. It is one of the most cohesive approaches to healing parental wounds available in book form that I have ever seen--one that addresses all three levels of existence: personal, cultural, and archetypal. Plus it is so wise about issues concerning pre- and perinatal psychology as well. Even after having read it several times, I am still informed and inspired by this little book.

1-0 out of 5 stars Insane!
It's hard to give this book a one-star rating.Although the authors have everything wrong about pregnancy, memory, trauma and therapy from a scientific standpoint, the book is so weirdly silly!

For example, as I recall, Emerson claims to have helped his twin be born by pulling her out behind him. One author, the Catholic priest, claims to have healed himself of his issues with women by imagining, for extended periods of time, being breast fed by the Virgin Mary.And did you know, that at conception, drunken sperm attacking the defenseless ovum can create all sorts of mental health havoc!Utterly amazing lunacy!

5-0 out of 5 stars Remembering Our Home is a Golden Key
I purchase this book ten copies at a time and give them away.
I recently expressed to one of the authors, William Emerson, that if I could, I would get a megaphone and announce it from the rooftops.Remembering Our Home is a most gently written, beautifully illustrated book that invites the reader to reflect on the earliest and most impressionable moments of being human--in the womb.If at first this strikes you as improbable to do, consider the countless life dreams and aspirations you, or people you know have had, and somehow, someway fulfillment seems to be just out of reach.Remembering Our Home can help build bridges across the gaps to fulfillment by revealing potential blocks, that can form in our first experiences of feeling physically and emotionally. Some examples of causes of these blocks discussed in the book are being born early, or late, toxins like niccotine or drugs, and parents in a stressful environment.Throughout the book there are suggested processes and tools for accessing our earliest potentials. I was born with a disability, and working with this, and the ample additional referals in the book is transforming the quality of my daily life.I am learning from it to benefit myself and all the babies and children in my world. ... Read more


83. Computers Won't Hurt You...Really
by William Love
Hardcover: 108 Pages (1997-12-01)
list price: US$25.00 -- used & new: US$25.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0738809721
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
A Slightly Off-The-Wall Reference Guide of Terms and Buzzwords...that will make you an expert in minutes, and make the experts shake their heads! ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Great for a Laugh!
This book is absolutely hilarious. Techies and troglodytes alike will enjoy the irrevent explanations of what can sometimes be considered one of humanity's most frustrating inventions! ... Read more


84. India's hurt, and other addresses,
by William Mentzel Forrest
 Unknown Binding: 171 Pages (1909)

Asin: B00085GSW6
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85. Vamperotica #1 December 1994 Adult Comic (Third Printing, "The stroke of death is as a lover's pinch, Which hurts, & is desir'd" -William Shakespeare.)
Unknown Binding: Pages (1994)

Asin: B0042AT3XO
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Editorial Review

Product Description
comic ... Read more


86. The Indian Frontier, 1763-1846 (Histories of the American Frontier)
by R. Douglas Hurt
Paperback: 318 Pages (2002-08-26)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$6.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0826319661
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This synthesis of Indian-white relations west of the Appalachians from the end of the French and Indian War to the beginning of the Mexican War is not simply a story of whites versus Indians. The term whites encompassed British, Spanish, and American settlers and governments, and the hundreds of Indian tribes who opposed them were no more unified than their European colonizers. The author focuses on relations among the British, the Spanish, the Americans, and Indian tribes in territories claimed by more than one of these groups, with particular emphasis on Indian tribes’ pursuit of trade, peace, and guarantees of their land. Self-interest motivated all the players in these complex interactions, and when irreconcilable differences inevitably resulted these were settled by force.

The broad chronological and geographical scope of this volume encompasses British efforts to enforce new settlement policies after their defeat of the French, the Spanish system of missions and presidios, trade in the Columbia River basin of the Pacific Northwest, the Indian Removal Act and the Trail of Tears, and the establishment of a strong military presence to defend the trade routes of the Great Plains. The author’s clear explanations of complex negotiations over trade, land, and policy among countless conflicting groups during a period of transition will be invaluable for students and for the interested general reader. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Excellent History with a Different Perspective
This is not a standard listing of Indian wars when describing what happened to the Native American Indians but what happened to them from the encroachment of several nations. The Americans, British, Spanish and French all had effects on the natives creating different policies and treaties. The book starts from the end of the French Indian War when the French become neutralized opening westward expansion. But the book delves immediately into the Spanish attempts to conquer the west particularly Texas, New Mexico and California. Using missions and the Catholic Church to create Missions or Presidios, the Spanish make attempts to subjugate the natives by forcing their religion on them and virtually making them slaves. Many tribes withdraw into the interior and the effects of disease are devastating reducing the populations tremendously. Hurt notes the enterprising trading of the Chinooks and how they were able to deal with the multiple cultures of Europeans. The author notes that Jefferson originated the plan to move natives west of the Mississippi. President Jackson manipulated breaking treaties on technical grounds arguing that State's rights could nullify Federal treaties forcing the removal of the Creeks, Choctaws, and Cherokees. Chickasaw and others. Fascinating that the author pinpoints how government leaders created divisions between full bloods and mixed bloods and among the splinter groiups of tribes to get legal signings that did not always represent the majority. Also, the author speaks of the attempts at confederation of several tribes such as the Shawnees, Miamis, Delewares, Wyandots, and Ottawas etc. to defeat white expansion. Success is shocking initially to the Americans as General Arthur St. Clair's army suffers a far worse defeat casualty wise than Custer's troop as he loses 623 dead and 250 wounded in 1791. Inevitably, the flourishing attempts of resistance are put down requiring natives to move further west causing their own conflicts with the plains Indians. In addition, the book covers accounts of tribes in conflict such as the Comanche who fought the Apache and the some unique forms of tolerance. An example is the New Mexicans tolerated the Comanche raiding Mexico for horses passing through New Mexico as long as the Comanche didn't attack them. Certainly stressed Mexican and American relations. Gruesome account of how the Mexican government attempted to use rewards fostering professional scalp hunters to eradicate the Apache who preyed on their undermanned frontier. This book sets the course of understanding how the natives were force to move or in some cases eradicated due to disease from white contact. This is an excellent book for a platform into the Plains Indian conflicts. ... Read more


87. Power to Hurt: THE VIRTUES OF ALIENATION
by William Monroe
Paperback: 256 Pages (1998-01-01)
list price: US$20.00 -- used & new: US$4.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 025206657X
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Hidden connection: Colombine High School, Littleton massacre
This book deals with the vices as well as the virtues of alienation.The massacre at Colombine High School in Littleton, Colorado, would seem be a manifestation of the vices of alienation, resistance, or disaffection.Theauthor says, without imaginative strategies that shape the motives ofalienation in healthy ways, we are doomed to see them manifested inpathological ways.Alienistic literature is still in the public domain, agesture of respect (for the audience), not of violence.The author seessuch works as antidotes to the violent or otherwise pathological impulsesof civilization's "discontents."

5-0 out of 5 stars Interesting connection to Colombine/Littleton, CO massacre
This book deals with the vices as well as the virtues of alienation.The massacre at Colombine High School in Littleton, Colorado, would seem be a manifestation of the vices of alienation, resistance, or disaffection.Theauthor says, without imaginative strategies that shape the motives ofalienation in healthy ways, we are doomed to see them manifested inpathological ways.Alienistic literature is still in the public domain, agesture of respect (for the audience), not of violence.The author seessuch works as antidotes to the violent or otherwise pathological impulsesof civilization's "discontents." ... Read more


88. The Yeast Connection - A Guide to Good Nutrition and Better Health
by William G. , Jones, Marjorie Hurt Crook
Paperback: Pages (1989-01-01)

Asin: B002Z3HJAO
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89. Report of the Investigations of the Four Bear Site, 39DW2, Dewey County, South Dakota 1958-1959: Archaeological Studies Circular No 10
by Wesley R., Jr., William G. Buckles, Eugene Fugle, and George A. Agogino Hurt
 Paperback: Pages (1962)

Asin: B002DIALX8
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90. New Pa. workers' comp. law hurts workers, labor says. (Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania AFL-CIO President William George): An article from: National Underwriter ... & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management
by Angela K. Calise
 Digital: 2 Pages (1993-07-12)
list price: US$5.95 -- used & new: US$5.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B0008VB8ZC
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This digital document is an article from National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management, published by The National Underwriter Company on July 12, 1993. The length of the article is 512 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

From the supplier: Pennsylvania AFL-CIO Pres William George denounced Pennsylvania's new workers' compensation law as totally harmful to workers and labelled it a law that seeks to make the state's citizens richer by making injured workers poorer. George accused the law of eliminating minimum compensation rates for part-time employees, allowing medical treatments to be placed in abeyance while employers and physicians argue about payments, and failing to have provisions that dealt with safety in the workplace. Insurance industry associations have praised all or parts of the new law.

Citation Details
Title: New Pa. workers' comp. law hurts workers, labor says. (Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania AFL-CIO President William George)
Author: Angela K. Calise
Publication: National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management (Magazine/Journal)
Date: July 12, 1993
Publisher: The National Underwriter Company
Page: p2(2)

Distributed by Thomson Gale ... Read more


91. Tucker's Last Stand
by William F. Buckley
 Audio Cassette: Pages (1991-04)
list price: US$44.95 -- used & new: US$28.32
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 078610225X
Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Blackford Oakes and a swashbuckling soldier of fortune named Tucker arrive in Southeast Asia in 1964 on a critical mission for the U.S. government. As usual Buckley fills his novel with intrigue, historical detail, and his inimitable wit. 6 cassettes. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

3-0 out of 5 stars Read it for the vibrant history, not the story
A workmanlike later novel in the Blackford Oakes series. The detail about Vietnam and the politics of the time (much of it is set in 1964) is striking and vintage Buckley. However, the fate of Oakes' colleague and titular character is obvious from early in the book. Read it for how it brings history to life in a fictional setting and to catch up on the latest in the life of the series hero -- both are worthwhile, and entertaining, reasons. But not as much for the storyline; there isn't much mystery here.

3-0 out of 5 stars Fictional Footnote to the Vietnam War
Buckley gives us an interesting snapshot of one aspect of the Vietnam War -- namely, a high-tech attempt to interdict movement down the fabled Ho Chi Minh Trail.Although fictional, it deals with a lot of fact and brings back searing memories of those days in the early 1960s before the U.S. became so fully immersed in the Vietnam War.Though an interesting period piece, the book fails to excite the reader.In typical Buckley style, "Tucker's Last Stand" moves deliberately but lacks compelling moments.You won't stay awake reading this book.The best part of the book is the glimpse it gives of some real, historic people (LBJ, Goldwater, MacNamara). A fictional footnote it is. A thriller it aint.

5-0 out of 5 stars Superb storytelling!
Bill Buckley took a break from Blackford Oakes to give us this exciting Vietnam-era war novel, and I'm glad he did.Tucker is an excellent protagonist in the vein of Clancy's "Mr. Clark".

1-0 out of 5 stars Toilet this book
I found that this novel had more viewpoints than an actual story.And just what was the story? It seemed that ten pages could have been enough. Stupid, stupid, and more stupid! ... Read more


92. Dear God, It Hurts!": Comfort for Those Who Grieve
by William L. Coleman, Patricia Coleman
Paperback: 165 Pages (2000-06)
list price: US$8.99 -- used & new: US$1.35
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1569551928
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Editorial Review

Product Description
People hurting from loss might not feel much like reading a book, but they might find relief by dipping into a collection of poignant stories. So the Colemans, with their flair for story-telling, present in "Dear God, It Hurts!" a collection of stories that bring cheer and encouragement. Like the top-selling Grieving the Loss of Someone You Love, "Dear God, It Hurts!" is beautifully designed as an ideal gift for someone who is grieving. ... Read more


93. Hurt
by William Gravil
Kindle Edition: Pages (2010-09-03)
list price: US$5.00
Asin: B0041VXTH0
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Editorial Review

Product Description
The thoughts of man can sometimes be a maze of emotions. It is in the midst of the pain of loss, and the agony of defeat that we find inside us the words that comfort us. This is a compilation of the thoughts and hopes and madness of a single man. Over the course of a few years, all the poems in this book were written to help the Author cope,or to explain the feelings that even he could not understand. It is a look into the heart and soul of a brilliant but twisted mind. It is a look inside the Man. ... Read more


94. Hurt, Baby, Hurt
by William Walter III Scott
 Unknown Binding: Pages (1970)

Asin: B003K0FWDW
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95. Internal investigations: what you don't know can hurt your company.(LAW JOURNAL 2010): An article from: Business North Carolina
by Peter Anderson, William Terpening
 Digital: 5 Pages (2010-06-01)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$9.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003UYG10G
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Business North Carolina, published by Business North Carolina on June 1, 2010. The length of the article is 1206 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Internal investigations: what you don't know can hurt your company.(LAW JOURNAL 2010)
Author: Peter Anderson
Publication: Business North Carolina (Magazine/Journal)
Date: June 1, 2010
Publisher: Business North Carolina
Volume: 30Issue: 6Page: 40(2)

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning ... Read more


96. This shot won't hurt.(LETTERS FROM MAINE)(physicians' role in encouraging parents): An article from: Pediatric News
by William G. Wilkoff
 Digital: 3 Pages (2010-02-01)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$9.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003GZHHY8
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Pediatric News, published by International Medical News Group on February 1, 2010. The length of the article is 671 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: This shot won't hurt.(LETTERS FROM MAINE)(physicians' role in encouraging parents)
Author: William G. Wilkoff
Publication: Pediatric News (Magazine/Journal)
Date: February 1, 2010
Publisher: International Medical News Group
Volume: 44Issue: 2Page: 26(1)

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning ... Read more


97. My Hurt Is Over
by William Butler
 Paperback: Pages (1996)

Isbn: 0898963958
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Editorial Review

Product Description
"The miserable experience of a combat infantryman in the Vietnam War." ... Read more


98. Survival Kit for the Stranded: Helps for Those Who Hurt
by william self
Paperback: 133 Pages (1998)
-- used & new: US$4.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B000FMN44C
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Helps for Those Who Hurt is for human beings who are painfully aware of their humanness, who sometimes feel that life is passing them by, who sense that their aspirations and dreams are only bubbles, who are trapped and hedged in, who suffer the pangs of isolation even though surrounded by people who are stranded.
"Survival Kit for the Stranded" is an honest appraisal of the human dilemma of our hectic society. Its purpose is to help people grapple with what they are facing every day.

Book Specs

Paper Back
Publisher: G C Ministerial Association
Printed: 1998
Pages: 133

Table of Contents

Introduction
Stranded with Grief
Strsanded with Guilt
Stranded with Fear
Stranded in Illness
Stranded in Mental Illness
Stranded Alone
Stranded with Despair
Stranded in the Middle
Stranded Parents
stranded in the Stained-Glass Jungle
Stranded at the End
How to Survive: True Faith and Grit
Afterthought

... Read more

99. Survival kit for the stranded: Helps for those who hurt
by William L Self
 Hardcover: 141 Pages (1975)
-- used & new: US$5.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B0006CE7XI
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100. At Leningrad's Gates: The Combat Memoirs of a Soldier with Army Group North
by William Lubbeck, David B. Hurt
Hardcover: 264 Pages (2007-04-19)
list price: US$31.63 -- used & new: US$20.63
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1844156176
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
This is the remarkable story of a German soldier who fought throughout World War II, rising from conscript private to captain of a heavy weapons company on the Eastern Front.

William Lubbeck, age 19, was drafted into the Wehrmacht in August 1939. As a member of the 58th Infantry Division, he received his baptism of fire during the 1940 invasion of France. The following spring his division served on the left flank of Army Group North in Operation Barbarossa. After grueling marches admidst countless Russian bodies, burnt-out vehicles, and a great number of cheering Baltic civilians, Lubbeck's unit entered the outskirts of Leningrad, making the deepest penetration of any German formation.

The Germans suffered brutal hardships the following winter as they fought both Russian counterattacks and the brutal cold. The 58th Division was thrown back and forth across the front of Army Group North, from Novgorod to Demyansk, at one point fighting back Russian attacks on the ice of Lake Ilmen. Returning to the outskirts of Leningrad, the 58th was placed in support of the Spanish "Blue" Division. Relations between the allied formations soured at one point when the Spaniards used a Russian bath house for target practice, not realizing that Germans were relaxing inside.

A soldier who preferred to be close to the action, Lubbeck served as forward observer for his company, dueling with Russian snipers, partisans and full-scale assaults alike. His worries were not confined to his own safety, however, as news arrived of disasters in Germany, including the destruction of Hamburg where his girlfriend served as an Army nurse.

In September 1943, Lubbeck earned the Iron Cross First Class and was assigned to officers' training school in Dresden. By the time he returned to Russia, Army Group North was in full-scale retreat. Now commanding his former heavy weapons company, Lubbeck alternated sharp counterattacks with inexorable withdrawal, from Riga to Memel on the Baltic. In April 1945 Lubbeck's company became stalled in a traffic jam and was nearly obliterated by a Russian barrage followed by air attacks.

In the last chaotic scramble from East Prussia, Lubbeck was able to evacuate on a newly minted German destroyer. He recounts how the ship arrived in the British zone off Denmark with all guns blazing against pursuing Russians. The following morning, May 8, 1945, he learned that the war was over.

After his release from British captivity, Lubbeck married his sweetheart, Anneliese, and in 1949 immigrated to the United States where he raised a successful family. With the assistance of David B. Hurt, he has drawn on his wartime notes and letters, Soldatbuch, regimental history and personal memories to recount his four years of frontline experience. Containing rare firsthand accounts of both triumph and disaster, At Leningrad's Gates provides a fascinating glimpse into the reality of combat on the Eastern Front.

REVIEWS

"...a well-wrought ground level view of daily life in hell."WWII Magazine No 3, 06/2007

"... compiled with attention to details. The reader will feel as though he is alongside Lubbeck as he calls fire missions on the enemy during his three years of service."Military Trader 11/2007 ... Read more

Customer Reviews (26)

5-0 out of 5 stars All is well that ends well but maybe pretty hard to go through
At Lenningrad's Gates by William Lubbeck and David Hurt is a 2006 addition to the large number of books available on World War II . Copyright some 60 years after the events William has had time to reflect on what was important along the way.The book is an account of this man's life other than just about the exploits of a German soldier on the Eastern Front.It really is a love story against the tumultuous backdrop of living in Germany from the 1920s on; the depression , political turmoil, war, defeat and the aftermath.William spends quite a bit of time, about the first20% of the book, telling of his upbringing on a farm in Germany. As a somewhat idealistic bullet proof young lad he actually volunteers for service in the Army but on reflection in writing the book much later says, "If we had been older and wiser, our fears about the future would have been far greater".

His time in the Army sees him in the invasion of France and then off to Army Group North in the 58th Infantry Division making its way to Lenningrad, ending up in a siege that doesn't quite work out due to political interference.He has several very narrow escapes and states that God obviously had other plans for him other than ending up dead in Russia. The account of his time on the Russian Front is very interesting and very well written. He ends up as a commissioned officer (Leutnant) in the same unit he was in as a Corporal (Unteroffizier).The whole reading is dramatic and the account of the collapse in 1944 is quite thrilling.

The book spends probably some 15% on the aftermath, internment, the difficulties of living in Germany after the war, his eventual move to Canada and then to the USA. Interesting to me because my father born in 1930 on a farm in Germany, some ten years after William, did not end up in the Army, being too young but as a young man living through the devastation in Germany after the war, took a boat to Australia in 1952, probably for very similar reasons that William went to America.

William gives an account of his family's integration into the United States of America and his acceptance by the people there. In later years his wife becomes seriously ill and although he had attended a Lutheran church on a regular basis throughout his life, having been bought up that way, he actually finds God at this time. So all those narrow escapes in his earlier life as a young man do seem to be God's providence for him and, it would seem, for a more glorious future than William the young German soldier/officer could have ever dreamed.

5-0 out of 5 stars Unique insights on the Leningrad Front
From the German perspective, Leningrad has been the least covered sector of the Russian Front. Of course for the Russians, it is quite the opposite --- the defense of Leningrad ranks in first order of the epic battles that won them the war.

AT LENINGRAD'S GATES is only the second first-hand account I have read from a German soldier who spent most of the war on this front. William Lubbeck manages to add some insights into this front, and into the minds of the German people before, during, and after the war, that I did know of before.

First, Lubbeck adds some color to the background of the war. We have learned from history that the Germans were angered by the Treaty of Versailles that ended World War I. Lubbeck explains from a personal point of view the humiliation and shame that the Germans felt in the interwar years. He describes how their anger made them receptive to Adolph Hitler's ambition to restore German prestige, even though many, including Lubeeck and his family, absolutely detested Hitler on a personal level.

Then there is the campaign of Germany's Army Group North that, with Lubbeck's division in the spearhead, fought its way to "within 7 or 8 miles of Leningrad's city center." Lubbeck explains the exhilaration of the drive as his unit was on the verge of overrunning the city only to be ordered to retreat into siege lines by Hitler's personal command. (Hitler pulled troops out of Leningrad to bolster the flagging attack on Moscow several hundred miles to the south). Lubbeck wonders if the war might have had an entirely different outcome if the drive into Leningrad had been allowed to continue for a few more days. As it turned out the units withdrawn from Leningrad were thrown into the catastrophic defeat at Moscow, so neither city was ever taken. One can feel Lubbeck's frustration, standing in the hills of Leningrad's suburbs and seeing the city that the Germans would never take.

Lubbeck also explains that the fighting in and around Leningrad was orderly. Except for the encirclement of an army corps at Demyansk, the Germans did not experience the catastrophic events on this front that destroyed their armies fighting at Moscow, Stalingrad, Kursk, and Byelorussia. Even the Demyansk encirclement was successfully lifted, causing a sense of false optimism that was to doom the much larger encirclement of an entire army at Stalingrad the following year. Lubbeck says that except for the shortages of the first winter the German army around Leningrad was well equipped with food and equipment. Its fighting retreat back to Germany remained orderly until the last month of the war when in East Prussia it was finally swept up by the disintegration that had overtaken the rest of the German army. Even then Lubbeck's unit managed a cohesive evacuation to western Germany and was able to escape capture by the Russians.

Finally, the book explains the dreadful aftermath of the war in Germany. Germany did not really begin to get back on its feet economically until 1949. Until then the country was threatened with actual starvation, even in the western zone occupied by the Americans, British, and French. Lubbeck had to make the dreadful decision to return to his family's farm in the Soviet Zone in order to smuggle food back to his family in the Western Zone. He was captured by the Soviets who had turned their zone into a police state, but was very fortunate to escape. Lubbeck says that the Germans had no love lost for the Western Allies until conditions begin to improve in the late 1940s. It would seem that the Marshall Plan by which America rebuilt Germany came none too soon.

I also enjoyed reading Lubbeck's experience after the war when he emigrated to Canada and then the United States. He became a world authority on electric furnaces for the steel industry and enjoyed a very colorful career. The story of how he matured after the war was almost as interesting as his experiences during it.

The only possible negative I would see in the book is that it is event-driven and therefore lacks the "novelesque" quality that one finds in Guy Sajer's classic FORGOTTEN SOLDIER. For example, Lubbeck tells us that he rode a train home on furlough and leaves it at that; Sajer tells us what the train smelled like, what his passengers looked like, and what he saw out the windows. However, Lubbeck's work, being briefer, is also more coherent. Bottom line is that it provides some insights into Germany before the war, during the war, and after the war that I had not encountered in other writings. For that reason it is worth the read.



4-0 out of 5 stars Good read. No closure...
Review by a reader from former Leningrad. Although I was not even born when Germany Army invade the Soviet Union, I was raised in Leningrad and acutely aware of the much suffering and 20 million lives lost by the Soviet Union, some are my relatives. The author deserves a credit for his account of battlefield experiences that was put in the historic context. It is interesting to follow the author's life path with his eventual arrival to United States to fulfill an "American dream". However, even though the book is structured in a way to present the authors' life and views as the story unfolds, I was shocked that there was virtually NO remorse that he was part of the war machine bringing death to another country in the name of patriotism, destruction of Communism, as well as simply following orders. A few words of regret in the Epilogue that Hitler's crimes caused much suffering on all sides seemed too little, too late, and too vague. The author's notion of similar suffering endured by the civilians at the Leningrad's siege and allies' bombing of Hamburg is unfortunate. Any loss of life is incomparable. As far as the personal account presented in this book, there is a lack of closure and feeling of injustice (I much agree with the prior review by R.A Forczyk). The book left me with mixed feelings. An incredible insight into the history. I was also astonished the pride of serving in the Wermacht Army is still there.

1-0 out of 5 stars Where's the combat? Not here.
If you are looking for a detailed account of frontline conditions and actual combat actions on the Eastern Front in WWII, this is NOT the book for you. The very few actual descriptions of combat are terse and laconic, widely spaced out between boring accounts of strategic army movements and the author's attempts to maintain his love life away from the front. There are some interesting tidbits about home life in Germany during the war and attitudes towards the Nazis, but most of the focus seems to be on Lubbeck's interest in various women. Details of daily living conditions, comrades, tactics, or enemy encounters are largely absent. I have no doubt that the author saw combat, but he seems unable or unwilling to describe any of the real thoughts, feelings, and emotions that his combat experiences provided. Sometimes the book seems like it was largely written as a doctoral dissertation by the co-author with just a sprinkling of personal information about Lubbeck added here and there for flavor. Overall, I was sadly dissappointed.

If you are looking for a gritty and gripping tale of the Eastern Front, I would highly recommend The Forgotten Soldier by Guy Sajer.

2-0 out of 5 stars Bland and uninteresting
David Hurt and William Luebbeck have given us a poorly researched and rather prosaic personal history of the latter's narcissitic recollections of his experience as soldier-officer in the Wehrmacht Infanterie Division 51.Reads more like a text book than autobiography.If you are an avid student of the purported subject, and understand the difference between an infantry gun and a howitzer, you will find annoying and transparent disingenuities throughout. Can't help feeling Hurt missed a golden opportunity to have Luebbeck refer to/ comment on Kurt von Zydowitz's authoritative history DIE GESCHICHTE DER 58. INFANTERIE DIVISION 1939-1945.

An OK read for curious readers with a passing interest in German soldier memoires - but check it out from your local public library. ... Read more


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