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Henry Wermuth

    This author conveys the harrowing experiences of surviving eight concentration camps during World War II. His writing delves deeply into human resilience in the face of extreme suffering. Through his work, he offers a unique perspective on dark periods of history, examining the strength of the spirit and the fragility of life. His writings serve as a powerful testament to the horrors of the past and the indomitability of survivors.

    In Pursuit of Slave Hunters
    The Rescue of the Murdered Consul's Children
    The Rescue of the Murdered Consul's Children
    Breathe deeply my son
    • 2013

      Adventurous Lord Alan Linlay embarks on a quest to locate his long-lost nephew, the son of his murdered brother-in-law, Lord Georg Gleneagle. The search begins in Constantinople and leads through a harem, uncovering a family sold into slavery. Spanning three continents, including the Orient, the American Wild West, and the Siberian steppes, the journey is filled with extraordinary adventures and trials, revealing the depths of pain and humiliation faced along the way.

      The Rescue of the Murdered Consul's Children
    • 2013

      In Pursuit of Slave Hunters

      • 210 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      When Leopold ellman - The son of a banker - inherits a substantial wealth, he sets off for The Sudan in search of adventure. Never in his wildest fantasies could he have imagined the perilous trip that awaited him... Helped by his muslim servant, he embarks on a relentless pursuit of so-called 'slave hunters'. Will he ever return safely home to his worried mother and loving fiance? Henry Wermuth started writing at the ripe age of eighty. Since then he has written a number of fiction and non-fiction books, of which this is his seventh.

      In Pursuit of Slave Hunters
    • 2011

      The Rescue of the Murdered Consul's Children

      Sold Into Slavery

      • 412 pages
      • 15 hours of reading

      The story follows the adventurous Lord Alan Lindsey as he reunites with his long-lost nephew in Constantinople, uncovering a family history tied to slavery and murder. The narrative spans three continents, including the Orient, the American Wild West, and Siberian steppes, revealing the harrowing experiences of the consul's family. Each discovery leads to extraordinary adventures filled with both triumphs and deep suffering, as they piece together their past and confront the challenges that arise from their tumultuous history.

      The Rescue of the Murdered Consul's Children
    • 1993

      Memoirs of a German Jew, born in Frankfurt am Main in 1923, who was deported with his family in 1938 to Poland. When the war began, he was living in Kraków. During the war he left Kraków for Bochnia, where a ghetto was established. From 1942 he went through labor camps in Kłaj (near Bochnia), Płaszów (near Kraków), and Ludwików (near Kielce); from July 1944 he was in camp Monowitz at Auschwitz, and in 1945 - in Nordhausen and Mauthausen, where he was liberated. (From the Bibliography of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism)

      Breathe deeply my son