Cabbage, Strudel and Trams (Part 2: West Germany)

Fiction & Literature, Humorous
Cover of the book Cabbage, Strudel and Trams (Part 2: West Germany) by Ivana Hruba, Ivana Hruba
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ivana Hruba ISBN: 9781476088211
Publisher: Ivana Hruba Publication: December 29, 2010
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Ivana Hruba
ISBN: 9781476088211
Publisher: Ivana Hruba
Publication: December 29, 2010
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Cabbage, Strudel & Trams tells the story of a young girl’s turbulent journey from childhood to adulthood, of adolescence begun behind the Iron Curtain, continued in a West German refugee camp and coming to a glorious end in the land Down Under. Narrated by Franta, an imaginary friend inhabiting the inner world of our young heroine Vendula, this satirical coming-of-age tale depicts the trials and tribulations of an ordinary Czech family living in a small mining town in communist Czechoslovakia in the early 1980s, their escape to West Germany and their resettlement in Australia.
The story begins when the combined household of Zhvuk & Dribbler is thrown into chaos by the untimely defection of Uncle Stan to West Germany. With nothing but their damaged political profile to lose, the family decides to eventually follow in Uncle Stan’s footsteps but not before puberty, free enterprise, unrequited love and things that only happen to other people shred our young heroine’s heart. With charm, poise and a little grace, Franta navigates Vendula through the pitfalls of her teenage years, guiding her to discover her own identity. As shenanigans gather momentum, Franta’s humorous insights into Vendula’s loopy family: the assertive mother, the henpecked father, the enterprising granddad, the blissful grandma, the dissenting uncle and his circle of ‘freedom fighting’ friends build a picture of the life of ordinary folk surviving the oppressive communist regime.
Well, even straw will eventually break the camel’s back. Following a trip to the almighty Soviet “Onion” where rows of empty shop windows reveal the future all too clearly, the family escapes to West Germany. Unexpectedly, the refugee camp, a colourless shapeless blur on the edge of a dark, dark forest where only goblins live, is a “happy” kind of place in which tobacco chewing, nose picking, throat clearing, the occasional riot, and plentiful and uninhibited sexual exploits are the order of the day. Of course, life is not all beer and crackers for our heroes; having carved out some sort of an existence in the camp, new challenges arise when the family arrives in Australia.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Cabbage, Strudel & Trams tells the story of a young girl’s turbulent journey from childhood to adulthood, of adolescence begun behind the Iron Curtain, continued in a West German refugee camp and coming to a glorious end in the land Down Under. Narrated by Franta, an imaginary friend inhabiting the inner world of our young heroine Vendula, this satirical coming-of-age tale depicts the trials and tribulations of an ordinary Czech family living in a small mining town in communist Czechoslovakia in the early 1980s, their escape to West Germany and their resettlement in Australia.
The story begins when the combined household of Zhvuk & Dribbler is thrown into chaos by the untimely defection of Uncle Stan to West Germany. With nothing but their damaged political profile to lose, the family decides to eventually follow in Uncle Stan’s footsteps but not before puberty, free enterprise, unrequited love and things that only happen to other people shred our young heroine’s heart. With charm, poise and a little grace, Franta navigates Vendula through the pitfalls of her teenage years, guiding her to discover her own identity. As shenanigans gather momentum, Franta’s humorous insights into Vendula’s loopy family: the assertive mother, the henpecked father, the enterprising granddad, the blissful grandma, the dissenting uncle and his circle of ‘freedom fighting’ friends build a picture of the life of ordinary folk surviving the oppressive communist regime.
Well, even straw will eventually break the camel’s back. Following a trip to the almighty Soviet “Onion” where rows of empty shop windows reveal the future all too clearly, the family escapes to West Germany. Unexpectedly, the refugee camp, a colourless shapeless blur on the edge of a dark, dark forest where only goblins live, is a “happy” kind of place in which tobacco chewing, nose picking, throat clearing, the occasional riot, and plentiful and uninhibited sexual exploits are the order of the day. Of course, life is not all beer and crackers for our heroes; having carved out some sort of an existence in the camp, new challenges arise when the family arrives in Australia.

More books from Humorous

Cover of the book The Quest for Nothing in Particular by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book Essays on Paul Bourget by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book You Gonna Finish That Dragon? by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book The Reluctant Cannibals by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book The $500 Question by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book 13 Hours To Baghdad: The Screenplay by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book Let's parler Franglais again! by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book Angel's Share by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book Johnny Would You Love Me If My Dick Were Bigger by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book Man's Best Friend by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book The Baby Snook Scripts Volume 3 by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book 8 Short Stories by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book Brothers of a Band by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book We Are the Government: the Budget by Ivana Hruba
Cover of the book What If? A Collection of Short Fiction By J. Paul Cooper by Ivana Hruba
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy