<p>As far back as Claire Gebben can remember her grandmother wrote letters to the &quot;relatives in Freinsheim&quot; relatives living in a rural wine-making town in Germany. After her grandmother died Claire&#39;s father and family kept the tradition alive writing letters and emails and also visiting the relatives in person. Then in 2008 when Claire&#39;s relative Angela Weber travels from Germany to visit her in the Pacific Northwest Angela brings along a surprise--over a dozen 19th-century letters found in an attic in Freinsheim written by their common ancestors.</p><p>As the two set out to translate the Old German Script Claire and Angela become captivated by the stories and the immigrants&#39; impressions of the New World. That same fall Claire enters a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program and chooses to write about the people of the letters for her graduate thesis. Her decision sparks a journey both challenging and inspiring a research adventure including four days of intensive blacksmithing and a month-long stay in the German Rhineland-Palatinate.</p><p>Even as Claire wrestles to bring her ancestors to life on the page she suffers through loss in her own life and finds strength through new family connections. Via 19th-century correspondence 21st-century emails and present-day relationships and encounters&nbsp;<em>How We Survive Here: Families Across Time</em>&nbsp;weaves together a story of how we must strive to survive amid experiences past and present and within the broader sweep of history.</p><p><em>How We Survive Here</em>&nbsp;includes over two dozen authentic 19th-century letters written by German immigrant blacksmiths and wagon-makers to Cleveland Ohio.</p>
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