Experience the Danger and Chaos in World War II Holland -- New Memoir Recalls Author's Personal Experiences Living Under Nazi Rule


SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif., Sept. 18, 2008 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A Point of Reference, a new book released through Xlibris, explores a young Dutch girl's perspective of the Nazi occupation of Holland during Word War II. In her memoir Elsa M. van der Laaken relives the WWII years in The Hague, Holland where she was born in 1936. She was almost four years old when Hitler's war machines attacked the neutral country like "thieves in the night" and the Nazi High Command decided to settle in her city. The act of war shattered the stability of the van der Laaken household. Her Dutch father, in Queen Wilhelmina's service, had his job put on hold when a German lawyer took charge of all the Royal properties. Her German mother became suddenly "the enemy" in the eyes of the angry Dutch in the neighborhood. The family lived in a house that came with her father's job at the Royal stables. Her father agreed to be the driver for the German lawyer while both parents secretly helped the Dutch resistance. They continued to live in the Royal Stables' house under Nazi scrutiny.

From the start of the war in 1940, the complex events that surround the young girl, and the reaction of her parents, become a point of reference and form her insight. The child's view of a loving and safe environment in Old World Europe depict family members, their kitchens, food and the community spirit when the family pig is slaughtered, lovingly. These events are in sharp contrast with the Nazi Doctrines that affected her life during the war years. Readers will learn about the secret radio and the uplifting effect Churchill's war speeches had on the family, also about the "divers," the hiding people who passed through her house. They will feel the fear when a fired V2 rocket returns from where it came and when a Nazi soldier blocks her way home from school. Much is revealed when she grips her father's hand when they enter "the lion's den," a famous restaurant taken over by the Nazis.

The experience of the tale is told through the eyes of a child, and is in this way fresh and void of prejudice. The book observes Elsa's loyalty to her parents and the resourcefulness of the latter. Survival was incredibly difficult during the winter of 1945 when people in the west of Holland had to survive on 340 calories per day. The cruelty of the Nazi regime reached a peak in her young life when her cousin was executed one month before liberation. This tragic event is followed by the joyous accounts of "Operation Manna-Chowhound," the U.S.A. ordered food-droppings over the starving west of Holland, and finally freedom. The epilogue describes the years following the liberation by the Allied soldiers. Although it took until 1950 to sort out who and what had been good or evil in Holland during the chaotic war years, there was a fair outcome concerning the fortunes of the van der Laaken family. Her experiences point to the ingenuity of the human spirit in troubled times -- from her father's conversion of a bicycle into a press that extracted oil from rape-seed, to the grating of white sugar beets as a sugar replacement.

Van der Laaken depicts the Nazi occupiers with insight, noting that many of them were anonymous pawns in a game of global dominance. Upon receiving the gift of an egg from a friendly Nazi soldier, her mother astutely noted that war affects everyone involved, stating, "Some soldiers are just country boys who had to leave home too soon." Indeed being a German married to a Dutchman gives the author's mother a layer of added gravitas that makes the story more poignant, and illustrates that making the choice between right and wrong is not something that should be guided by nationality, religion, or political affiliation, but by the moral high ground. As a peer of van der Laaken wrote, "it's easy for us, not having faced a real war in our adult lives, to forget how horrible life is for everyone...and easy to forget how wonderful our lives are because of it." Van der Laaken's powerful novel underscores this point with stunning and uncanny accuracy.

About the Author

Elsa M. van der Laaken grew up in The Hague, Holland where the Nazi High Command settled during WWII. Born in 1936 to a German mother and a Dutch father, who worked for Queen Wilhelmina during the war, she observed her family's precarious situation while living in a Nazi-occupied building called The Royal Stables as both her parents helped the Dutch resistance.

She left Holland at age twenty-two, married and lived in various countries where her professional life focussed on Teaching English as a Second Language. Her desire to write never wavered and over the years she preserved boxes full of memoirs, articles and personal notes. In 1994 she graduated from Vermont College after studying psychology and creative writing while still teaching in Brazil. After a period of intensive research in Holland, she moved in 1995 to California where her children and grandchildren live.


         A Point of Reference * by Elsa M. van der Laaken
                 Publication Date: May 7, 2002
 Trade Paperback; $18.69; 232 pages; 1-4010-3150-1; 978-1-4010-3150-3
 Cloth Hardback; $28.79; 232 pages; 1-4010-3151-X; 978-1-4010-3151-0

To request a complimentary paperback review copy, contact the publisher at (888) 795-4274 x. 7479. Tear sheets may be sent by regular or electronic mail to Marketing Services. To purchase copies of the book for resale, please fax Xlibris at (610) 915-0294 or call (888) 795-4274 x.7876.

Xlibris books can be purchased at Xlibris bookstore. For more information, contact Xlibris at (888) 795-4274 or on the web at www.Xlibris.com.



            

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