The Life of an Immigrant opens in a delivery room during an air raid, where a doctor tells William’s father he can save only the mother or the child. Both live, and that unlikely beginning sets the tone for a life defined by narrow escapes, stubborn hope, and everyday miracles. We follow William through bomb shelters, flight from invading armies, nights sleeping in barns, and the quiet heroism of a mother who refuses to give up, even when food is scarce and the future is uncertain.
As his father returns from Siberia and the family rebuilds, the book shifts from survival to reinvention. We travel with thirteen-year-old William across the Atlantic to America, watch him wrestle with a new language and culture, then see him choose to give back to his adopted country through Navy service. The narrative moves from the Cuban Missile Crisis to long months at sea, from early jobs and building a career to meeting Rosie in Florida and discovering a love that will anchor every decision.
Later chapters carry the reader through parenthood, business success, health challenges, and the unthinkable grief of losing Rosie after more than fifty years together, set against the backdrop of COVID-19 and an uncertain world. Yet even in loss, William’s story leans toward gratitude, faith, and forward motion. This is not a glamorous tale; it is a truthful one, about what it really costs to leave everything behind, and what is gained when you refuse to stop believing that tomorrow can still be better.