hardcover. Condizione: As New. A like new hardcover copy with a tight and square binding. Black hardcovers and dust jacket are like new (clean, no creasing, no edge wear). Text is clean. Careful packaging and fast shipping. We recommend EXPEDITED MAIL for even faster delivery. Shipped in 100% recyclable material.
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. 1st Edition. No discernible flaws to this copy. Introduction by Jonathan Safran Foer.
Editore: Atlantic Monthly, 2007
Da: Laurel Reed Books, Stratford, ON, Canada
EUR 7,85
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good. 1st. Front cover with vertical 5cm cut from boxcutter at bottom right -taped from inside, else a fine crisp new looking copy, unread.
EUR 19,57
Quantità: 2 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPaperback. Condizione: Brand New. reprint edition. 192 pages. 8.25x6.75x0.75 inches. In Stock.
EUR 11,93
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. Jacket design by Peter Dyer (illustratore). 1st Edition. First UK edition, first impression. Very minor edge wear to top and bottom of jacket and spine, not price clipped (£16.99), no inscriptions, internally clean tight and square, in almost 'as new' condition. 182pp, illustrated. In 1941, Petr Ginz was a young teenager living in Prague with his parents and sister. Adventurous, artistic and optimistic, he wrote poems and novels and edited a children's magazine inside the work camp at Theresienstadt. Originally written in his special code-language, Petr's diaries described daily life for the Ginz family and documented the introduction of anti-Jewish laws from a young adult's point of view - pithy and unsentimental. The writing stopped in 1942 when Petr received his summons, but the books survived in a Prague attic. They recently came to light in extraordinary circumstances and, they were published in the Czech Republic in 2005 to a storm of publicity. Edited by his sister Chava, and including background material and beautiful reproductions of Petr's artwork, this book encapsulates the soul and wisdom of a child caught in an adults' war. Petr Ginz died at the age of sixteen when he was transferred to Auschwitz concentration camp and gassed.
Da: M. & A. Simper Bookbinders & Booksellers, WARRNAMBOOL, VIC, Australia
EUR 18,81
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. First thus. With many illustrations, A fine copy in fine dustjacket. Not since Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl has such an intimately candid, deeply affecting account of a childhood compromised by Nazi tyranny come to light. As a fourteen-year-old Jewish boy living in Prague in the early 1940s, Petr Ginz dutifully kept a diary that captured the increasingly precarious texture of daily life. Petr was killed in a gas chamber at Auschwitz at the age of sixteen, and his diariesrecently discovered in a Prague attic under extraordinary circumstancesnow read as the prescient eyewitness account of a meticulous observer. Petr was a young prodigya budding artist and writer whose paintings, drawings, and writings reflect his insatiable appetite for learning and experience. He records the grim facts of his everyday life with a child's keen eye for the absurd and the tragic. ; 225 x 175mm; xii, 180 pages.
Paperback. Condizione: New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title!