Agnes Kaposi was born in Hungary the year before Hitler came to power
and started school at the outbreak of World War II. The Holocaust killed
many of her family, together with half a million Hungarian Jews, but a
series of miracles and coincidences allowed her to survive. She worked
as a child labourer in the agricultural and armament camps of Austria
and was liberated by a rampaging Soviet army. She struggled through
post-war hardship to re-enter Hungarian society, only to be caught up
for a decade in the vice of Stalinism. In 1956 a bloody revolution
offered the opportunity to escape to Britain, a country of freedom and
tolerance, where she started a family and built a career as a
ground-breaking electrical engineering teacher and consultant.
Dr Kaposi writes with compassion and optimism, without self-pity. The
tone is light, and there is plenty of irony, even humour. The narrative
is underscored by the historian László Csősz and illustrated by several
maps and more than a hundred archival images and family photographs.