Notes From Across the Pond
A Young Woman's European Odyssey in the 1950's
by
Book Details
About the Book
Starting out as a teenage college student in 1953,
the author takes us on a journey of discovery in Europe over a period of seven
years. We move from the highlands of
Scotland to Moscow’s Kremlin at the height of the Cold War. Coming soon after the end of World War II,
this was an era when few Americans traveled overseas. Cruise ships plied the Atlantic, or “the pond,” and airport
security was unheard of. The author
describes her travels in eighteen countries; how she met her husband while both
were studying under a Fulbright Grant in Italy and her experiences living in
England as an exchange teacher. Her
adventures led to romances, royal garden parties, a papal audience, czarist
palaces, bullfights, encounters with Nazis and communists and some scary moments. The historical background of the period and
the tensions of the Cold War are vividly described and explained for everyone
to be able to comprehend and enjoy.
About the Author
Benita Bross Fuchs, a first time author, has a
master’s degree in European and English.
She taught history for most of her career in New York City. She first went “Across The Pond” as a
teenage college student and continued traveling to Europe over the decades. She studied in Italy under a Fulbright Grant
and was an exchange teacher in England.
She is now retired and lives with her husband in a suburb of Washington,
D.C.