Quiet Hero e-bog
131,30 DKK
(inkl. moms 164,12 DKK)
When a father reveals his haunting past, a daughter takes an incredible journey of self-discovery . . . Emmy awardwinning journalist, TV host, and New York Times bestselling author Rita Cosby has always asked the tough questions in her interviews with the worlds top newsmakers. Now, in a compelling and powerful memoir, she reveals how she uncovered an amazing personal story of heroism and coura...
E-bog
131,30 DKK
Forlag
Threshold Editions
Udgivet
18 maj 2010
Længde
304 sider
Genrer
BG
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781439165614
When a father reveals his haunting past, a daughter takes an incredible journey of self-discovery . . . Emmy awardwinning journalist, TV host, and New York Times bestselling author Rita Cosby has always asked the tough questions in her interviews with the worlds top newsmakers. Now, in a compelling and powerful memoir, she reveals how she uncovered an amazing personal story of heroism and courage, the untold secrets of a man she has known all her life: her father. Years after her mothers tragic death, Rita finally nerved herself to sort through her mothers stored belongings, never dreaming what a dramatic story was waiting for her. Opening a battered tan suitcase, she discovered it belonged to her fatherthe enigmatic man who had divorced her mother and left when Rita was still a teenager. Rita knew little of her fathers past: just that he had left Poland after World War II, and that his many scars, visible and not, bore mute witness to some past tragedy. He had always refused to answer questions. Now, however, she held in her hand stark mementos from the youth of the man she knew only as Richard Cosby, proud American: a worn Polish Resistance armband; rusted tags bearing a prisoner number and the words Stalag IVB; and an identity card for an ex-POW bearing the name Ryszard Kossobudzki. Gazing at these profoundly telling relics, the well-known journalist realized that her fathers story was one she could not allow him to keep secret any longer. When she finally did persuade him to break his silence, she heard of a harrowing past that filled her with immense pride . . . and chilled her to the bone. At the age of thirteen, barely even adolescent, her father had seen his hometown decimated by bombs. By the time he was fifteen, he was covertly distributing anti-Nazi propaganda a few blocks from the Warsaw Ghetto. Before the Warsaw Uprising, he lied about his age to join the Resistance and actively fight the enemy to the last bullet. After being nearly fatally wounded, he was taken into captivity and sent to a German POW camp near Dresden, finally escaping in a daring plan and ultimately rescued by American forces. All this before he had left his teens. This is Richard Cosbys story, but it is also Ritas. It is the story of a daughter coming to understand a father whose past was too painful to share with those he loved the most, too terrible to share with a child . . . but one that he eventually revealed to the journalist. In turn, Rita convinced her father to join her in a dramatic return to his battered homeland for the first time in sixty-five years. As Rita drew these stories from her father and uncovered secrets and emotions long kept hidden, father and daughter forged a new and precious bond, deeper than either could have ever imagined.