
The narrator opens with a striking challenge: imagine that the hardships of post‑war Central and Eastern Europe could have been yours. By confronting the comforts of a privileged birth, the prose forces listeners to question the illusion of safety that distance and wealth provide. This reflective invitation sets the tone for a vivid portrait of a region reeling from famine, ruin, and the collapse of once‑stable societies.
Through a blend of personal insight and on‑the‑ground observation, the book paints the desperate reality faced by doctors, engineers, artists and ordinary families as their world crumbles. It explores how even the most educated and well‑off are reduced to manual labor, their savings rendered worthless, and their hopes turned to scarcity. Listeners will be drawn into a compassionate narrative that asks us to see beyond stereotypes, to feel the shared humanity behind the headlines of a continent still healing from conflict.
Full title
It Might Have Happened to You A Contemporary Portrait of Central and Eastern Europe
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (177K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive
Release date
2016-06-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1883–1959
A British-born writer who built his career in North America, he turned experience into fiction, journalism, and wartime memoir. His life moved from Oxford and publishing houses to the battlefields of World War I, giving his work an unusual mix of romance, travel, and hard-won realism.
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