It Might Have Happened to You
Coningsby Dawson
Gelesen von Lee Smalley





This is a frank eyewitness description of the suffering, starvation in particular, that was widely experienced in Central and Eastern Europe in the aftermath of "The Great War". “It is not stating matters too strongly to say that…peace had caused at least as much misery as the four years’ fury of embattled armies.” It is a powerful political and anti-war statement with scant mention of any battle. – Lee Smalley (3 hr 29 min)
Kapitel
It Might Have Happened To You | 7:41 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
These My Little Ones | 12:57 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
A Day Of Rest And Gladness | 10:37 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
The Sign Of The Falling Hammer | 8:39 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
Once Is Enough | 10:25 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
It Is Not Safe | 7:49 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
Christmas Eve In Vienna | 16:38 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
A Hospital In Buda | 7:02 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
An Economic Experiment | 8:53 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
Babuschka | 9:31 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
The Soul Of Poland | 10:47 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
One Child’s Story | 6:43 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
The Case Of Marki | 8:03 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
An Imperial Bread-Line | 12:39 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
Poland’s Common Man | 7:48 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
The Night Of The Three Kings | 17:23 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
Does Poland Want Peace? | 7:26 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
The Problem Of Dantzig | 6:41 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
Young Germany | 12:04 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |
Neither Peace Nor War | 19:34 | Gelesen von Lee Smalley |