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Bøger af Sydney Pearl

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  • af Sydney Pearl
    153,95 kr.

    A brash, funny, and downright ballsy ode to the ups and downs of life in the air. Diary of a Pissed-Off Flight Attendant is an eye opening, behind the scenes, indiscreet account based on almost two decades of aviation industry experience. Combining a unique blend of hilarious customer antics with the secrets behind the enviable lives of flight attendants and pilots, Diary of a Pissed-Off Flight Attendant provides an all-access pass for frequent flyers and novice travelers alike. Growing up, author Sydney Pearl admired her Aunt Claire's seemingly glamorous career. Then, Sydney became a flight attendant and found out it was a lot less glamorous and a lot more stressful than she'd thought it would be. Whether admitting to intentionally spilling drinks on passengers, or telling the story of how she unknowingly became "the help", Sydney Pearl takes you on a gut-busting journey into what really happens above 10,000 feet.

  • - The Power of 18
    af Sydney Pearl
    163,95 kr.

    There were both Jews and non-Jews living in the village where David Wolnerman was growing up when World War II broke out. Then life got more and more difficult for the Jews. Anti-Semitism was a problem and as Nazi soldiers came often, violence increased. Soldiers came looking for Jewish workers so at age thirteen, David made a decision to go with them. "They told me if I came to work, my family would be spared." He was taken to a camp called Auschwitz, just five kilometers from the village. Upon arrival, he saw a man separating the people into two lines, one to the left and one to the right. "I saw the people that went left. They were older, crippled, or with young children. I just knew that if I went left it wasn't good." David walked up to the man who was making the decisions. That man was the evil Dr. Joseph Mengele. He asked, "Wie alt bist du?" (How old are you?) David told him, "I am eighteen." What allowed David to lie about his age at that moment he doesn't know. "God told me something. I went right. If not, I would have been sent to my death," he recalls. "There was nothing in the camps," "No water, no food, no washing, no medicine, nothing." He worked hard labor jobs. Because of many miracles, he survived and came to America. Many years later, he told two Jewish girls from Des Moines, Iowa about his life during the war.