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The Last Waltz

A CLOSER LOOK

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Size: 6" x 9"
Pages: 608
Published: April 2009

 

by G. G. Vandagriff

Paperback

sku 5014292

Also Available: Bookshelf eBook

Related categories: GeneralMomFiction Lovers

“Intriguing ... This gripping novel sets the tone of one of the worst wars of our time.” — Holly Newton, Meridian Magazine

In December 1913, the city of Vienna glitters with promises of the future for sought-after debutante Amalia Faulhaber. But life takes a dramatic turn when simmering political unrest escalates into the most deadly war the world has ever known. Amalia is devastated when her fiance, Baron Eberhard von Waldburg, breaks off their engagement to return to his native Germany and obligatory military service. But she soon discovers that her passion for democracy in an increasingly fascist world has put everything she loves in danger. Her family torn apart and impoverished by the war, Amalia must now choose between an idealistic young Polish doctor, who shares her political views, and the wealthy Baron von Schoenenburg, an Austrian Cabinet minister who promises to provide safety and security in a violent, tumultuous time. Reminiscent of Gone with the Wind, this epic novel explores the nature of human character and the elusive search for love and peace.



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I thoroughly enjoyed reading this novel.

Joan, MD - September 12, 2009


I thoroughly enjoyed reading G.G. Vandagriff's novel "The Last Waltz." Amalia's personal struggles, which took place over several decades,seemed very real to me as they were set amid political struggles involving World War I and beyond. The story itself was very compelling--I was immediately drawn into a chaotic world of love and war--an interesting juxtaposition. I kept reading if only only to discovered how the story would end. But along the way I encountered several themes which ran throughout the novel. What does it mean to be in love? Is it true that you can give yourself completely to another person only once, as Amalia's uncle states? What does it mean to be part of a family--especially when family members keep secrets? How can one find strength to make good choices and persevere in the face of adversity? How can we avoid the tragedy of becoming, as one character says, "less than we were born to be"?

Norman Mailer wrote the following: "I feel that the…

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