Wolfgang I. Rauner (aka Johnny or Wolfie ) was born in Germany in 1928. He arrived in the US with his parents and three older siblings in June 1941 as a Jewish refugee from Hitler’s Germany, first ...visualizza altroWolfgang I. Rauner (aka Johnny or Wolfie ) was born in Germany in 1928. He arrived in the US with his parents and three older siblings in June 1941 as a Jewish refugee from Hitler’s Germany, first immigrating with his family to neighboring Luxembourg in 1935 and then escaping via France, Spain, and Portugal to the U.S. He first attended the public elementary school in Luxembourg and, after the German invasion of the Lowlands in May 1940, barred as a Jew, spent his last few months in a private school, hastily assembled by the local Jewish community.
Settling in the Washington Heights section in Manhattan, then a popular haven for German Jewish refugees, he first attended New York City Public School 189, from which he graduated in 1944 and subsequently attended the School of Industrial Art, a New York City High School, where he studied commercial art, sign painting, and hand lettering. Not being able to attend college because of the family’s limited resources, upon graduation, he worked for Sears Roebuck & Co. as a window designer and advertising director in a retail store, which was interrupted by two years in the US Army during the Korean War. He left Sears after returning to start a lifetime career in sales—first in the food business, followed by twenty years selling paints, the last thirty years as a successful manufacturers’ representative in the arts and crafts industry.
On retiring at age seventy-five, he began writing. Although not having any formal training in that art, he completed the memoirs of his youth: You Can Call Me Lucky.
Inventory: Destiny and Redemption is his first novel and the culmination of a lifelong dream realized at the ripe age of eighty-six.visualizza meno