paperback. Condizione: Very Good. Copeland, Eric (illustratore). Ships quickly. Almost like new. Minimal shelf/reading wear. Orphans Treasure Box sells books to raise money for orphans and vulnerable kids.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, 1983
Da: Arnold M. Herr, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Fine. Condizione sovraccoperta: Fine. Arthur Burdette Frost, Frederick Stuart Church & others (illustratore). Reprint edition. Thick octavo in dust jacket. B&W illustrations. Condition: upper corner of page xiii/xiv slightly dog-eared; else fine in fine DJ. Pages: xxxii, 815.
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good Dust Jacket. This book with dust jacket is clean, solid and in great shape! This is a hardcover book with 815 pages including many illustrations. The binding is strong with all pages firmly attached. The pages are clean with no soiling, writing, or tears. The copyright page states 1983 copyright renewed. The dust jacket is also in great shape with just a hint of edgewear (No Chips). I have placed the DJ in a fresh mylar jacket and this book looks and feels great! We always ship in a sturdy cardboard box!
Condizione: Good +. Location:69 76 pp. with some unusual illustrations In English 69.
Editore: London : printed by Pandora Press for World Union of Jewish Students, 1970
Da: MW Books Ltd., Galway, Irlanda
Prima edizione
EUR 48,95
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloFirst Edition. Good saddle-stapled copy in printed wrappers, now edgeworn and showing spotted stains or foxing. Edges lightly foxed. Remains strong and well-preserved overall. Physical description; 76 pages ; 23 cm. Notes; Date conjectural. Parallel text in Hebrew and English, with English commentary. Subjects; Haggadah. Passover. Judaism Liturgy. Seder. Jewish students. 20th century. 1970s. 1 Kg.
Editore: [ Honolulu: ] 1938 ]., 1938
Da: Michael R. Thompson Books, A.B.A.A., Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
The best-known version of ÒThe Tar-Baby and the RabbitÓ story was published by Joel Chandler Harris in his folklore collection Uncle Remus: His Songs and Sayings (1888) as ÒThe Wonderful Tar-Baby Story.Ó As Bryan Wagner writes in The Tar Baby: A Global History, ÒThe tar baby is an electric figure in contemporary culture. As a racial epithet, a folk archetype, an existential symbol, and an artifact of mass culture, the term Ôtar babyÕ stokes controversy, in the first place because of its racism. At least since the 1840s, Ôtar babyÕ has been used as a grotesque term of abuse, and it continues to feel like an assault no matter the circumstances in which it is employed. At the same time, Ôtar babyÕ has operated as a figure of speech suggesting a problem that gets worse the harder you try to solve it. The term takes both of these senses in the tar baby storyÉAgain and again, Uncle RemusÕs version of the tar baby was syndicated, translated, illustrated, excerpted, and interpolated in newspapers, magazines, folklore anthologies, and childrenÕs treasuriesÉ 7 x 9 in. 32 pp., with text and illustration on [12] pp. only. All manuscript text and illustrations in black ink. With a page-long inscription by E.A. Ropes. Cord-bound wooden boards (possibly Koa wood) carved with the initials ÒNLW.Ó Some wear and chipping to boards. Minor occasional toning, mostly to first and last leaf. Very good. This manuscript version of ÒThe Tar-Baby and the RabbitÓ was written and illustrated as a gift to ÒNancy,Ó probably the granddaughter of the manuscriptÕs creator. ÒWhen your Mother was a little girl I used to tell her some Uncle Remus stories,Ó the inscription reads. ÒI hope that you will enjoy this one of Brer Rabbit and the Tar Baby, and that I have remembered to tell it exactly as Uncle Remus told it so many years ago.Ó The tar baby exists in literally hundreds of versions derived over several centuries on at least five continents. Since the 1880s, collectors have claimed they heard the tar baby Ôover and overÕ in the field, leading some of them to speculate the story was ÔomnipresentÕ in world cultureÉAs a counterexample to [claims that Ôslavery destroyed the personalities of its victimsÕ], the tar baby showed that slaves were neither deracinated nor submissive. It was a story that survived the brutality of the Middle Passage, a story that was passed down from generation to generation and continent to continent, demonstrating the independence that slaves retained under the worst conditionsÓ (ix-xii).