Anna's Story

A True Story of a Young Girl's Will to Survive in the Aftermath of World War II

A compelling memoir that chronicles the extraordinary journey of resilience, hope, and survival in the face of unimaginable circumstances.

71XHjRsnuQL. SY466

A Testament to Human Resilience

“The year is 1945, and the war that ravaged most of Europe is drawing to an end.”

The German Wehrmacht and its collaborators have been defeated and are on the run. Countries like Poland, Russia, and Yugoslavia expelled millions of ethnic German civilians living within their borders as retribution for the human atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis against their people.

The ethnic Germans living in Yugoslavia were forced to abandon their homes, leaving everything behind, and make the long arduous trip to a safe haven in Austria and Germany. The Germans that refused to leave or could not travel were forced by communist Yugoslav partisans into concentration camps, where they were beaten, raped, murdered, or left to starve to death.

This true story follows the life of a young ethnic German girl, born and raised in Serbia, then part of Yugoslavia, amid the chaos, destruction, and death after WWII. Her will to live is a testament to the strength and courage of the human spirit.

Themes of Courage & Hope

Human Resilience

The extraordinary capacity of the human spirit to endure and overcome unimaginable hardship.

Survival Against Odds

A young girl's determination to live through the chaos and destruction of post-war Europe.

Historical Truth

Shedding light on the often-overlooked experiences of ethnic German civilians after WWII.

Preserving Memory

Ensuring that stories of courage and survival are not lost to time and forgotten by history.

dscn7644

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

STEVEN KAUTNER

Steven Kautner, author of “Anna’s Story: A True Story of a Young Girl’s Will to Survive in the Aftermath of World War II,” was born in Vienna, Austria, and brought to the United States as an infant. Raised in a German-speaking household in Chicago, he faced a turbulent youth after his mother left when he was eight, leading to drug and alcohol use during his teenage years.

At 17, he turned his life around by joining the U.S. Navy, where he trained as an Avionics Technician and maintained electronic systems on multiple Navy jets. After four years of service, he earned a G.E.D. and an associate degree in electronics engineering. His passion for aviation led him to work installing avionics in general aviation aircraft and later to earn his private pilot’s license.

 

Steven’s career flourished in Southern California, where he worked alongside celebrities like Steve McQueen and eventually founded his own successful avionics company. After two decades, burnout prompted him and his wife, Varida, to relocate to Virginia, where he joined the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum as an aircraft restoration specialist. Over 12 years, he helped restore iconic aircraft such as the Enola Gay and Space Shuttle Enterprise, with more than 17 aircraft now displayed at the museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center.

Missing California, Steven later accepted a position as an Aviation Safety Inspector with the FAA in Oakland, where he worked until his retirement in 2018 at age 62.

"Every story of survival is a victory against forgetting."

Steven Kautner

Discover Anna's Journey

Experience a story of remarkable courage, unwavering hope, and the indomitable strength of the human spirit. Anna's journey will move you, inspire you, and remind you of the power of resilience.

Reviews and Testimonials

[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "Anna's Story" by Steven G. Kautner.]
erin
John Doe
Designer
olympic story review page 0001
phillipines review page 0001

⭐ Must Read ⭐

The riveting untold story of what happened to ethnic Germans in E. Central Europe post-WWII. Stunning and startling. I couldn’t put it down!

SYNOPSIS

The year is 1945 and the war that has ravaged most of Europe is drawing to an end. The Nazi Germans and their collaborators have been defeated. Poland, Russia and Yugoslavia expelled millions of ethnic Germans living within their borders as retribution for the horrific human atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis against their people. The ethnic Germans living in Yugoslavia, who had nothing to do with the war, were forced to abandon their homes, leaving everything behind, and make the long, arduous journey to safe haven in Austria and Germany. The ethnic Germans that refused to leave or could not travel were forced at gunpoint by communist Yugoslav partisans, into concentration death camps where they were tortured, raped, murdered, of left to die from starvation or disease. This true story follows the life of a young ethnic German girl born and raised in Serbia, then part of Yugoslavia, amid the chaos, destruction, and death AFTER WWII. Her will to live is a testament to the strength and courage of the human spirit.

“How could I not write this story?” asks author Steven Kautner in this gripping and harrowing account about what happened to his mother, Anna Friedrich, and her family of ethnic Germans after World War II. The follow-on is, "How can anyone not read this story?” Because Anna’s Story is absolutely astonishing. Eye-opening. And jaw-dropping. It’ll blow you away.

This is the untold true story of what happened to the ethnic Germans of Eastern Central Europe in the aftermath of WWII. This intensely personal account chronicles a time when “the cruel and inhumane treatment of the ethnic German people was unprecedented.” Told to the author by his mother, “who actually lived the journey of this book,” Anna’s Story recounts how the brutal retribution and revenge against the ethnic German people for Nazi war crimes went unchecked from 1944 to 1949, when Anna Friedrich escaped. What emerges is a spellbinding and shattering story of unimaginable horrors inflicted upon ethnic Germans after the war simply because they were German.

The story follows Anna Friedrich’s life from 1939, when she was five years old, until 1984, when she is fifty-one and living in the United States. Anna was born and raised in Serbia, then part of Yugoslavia, by ethnic German parents. The first quarter or so of this book is devoted to an in-depth look at Anna’s life as a young child: Anna’s schooling, home and family life, food, work, culture and traditions. This portion of the book may seem a bit plodding to some readers. But it’s important back story, providing a broader context and sharp contrast for the horrors that are to come.

Caught between the Nazis and the advancing Russian Army in late 1944, some of the townspeople in Anna’s village flee to Germany. Those who can’t or won’t leave have no idea what’s coming. In taut, tense prose, the author narrates how his then-eleven year-old mother, Anna, and her family are soon caught in a firefight between the Russian Red Army and retreating German forces. Then the Serbs take over. Looting, pillaging, mayhem, murder and worse ensue in this startling and stunning narrative. Anna recalls how communist partisan soldiers “took everything we had, even our animals.” The family is rounded up, loaded on cattle cars, and transported to concentration death camps in northern Serbia. Here, the author details Anna’s fight for survival in place where “the smell of death hung everywhere.” Where disease, starvation and cruelty dog every step. Where children fight over discarded potato peels. Where typhus, dysentery, vermin, despair, and bitter cold without heat result in people dying faster than they can be buried. In the camps, disease kills one out of every four people. There’s no soap, no bathing, and no washed clothes for over a year. Here, Anna becomes “a walking dead person.” She’s thirteen years old and half her family is dead.

But Anna’s mother is indomitable. Suffering from disease and malnutrition herself, Anna’s mother is still a force of nature. She eventually orchestrates an escape from the camps to Hungary. The tattered remnants of Anna’s family continues to Austria, crossing the border on foot. Anna later emigrates to the United States, where she eventually becomes a proud U.S. citizen. (Names and faces come to life in a section of family photos.)

This true story is astonishing. Appalling. Disturbing. It’s also riveting. Eye-opening and jaw-dropping. Tip: Don’t start this book late at night. If you do, you’ll be turning pages into the wee hours until the very end (don’t ask how I know that). I couldn’t put it down!

Anna’s Story isn’t a light read. But it’s an important one and deserves a wide audience. It’s also a towering achievement, especially for a first-time author.

Finally, this reviewer rarely awards five-star ratings. But this eloquent and articulate account of a little-known piece of human history will grip your heart and wring it dry on its way to a five-star rating. Don’t miss it!


Read this and decide for yourself.

REVIEWED BY

Kristine L.

Follow