Condizione: good. A copy that has been read, remains in good condition. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. The spine and cover show signs of wear. Pages can include notes and highlighting and show signs of wear, and the copy can include "From the library of" labels or previous owner inscriptions. 100% GUARANTEE! Shipped with delivery confirmation, if you're not satisfied with purchase please return item! Ships via media mail.
Da: My Sister's Books, Pawleys Island, SC, U.S.A.
Trade Paperback. Condizione: Used.
Da: Hellertown Books, Hellertown, PA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Uniquest, New Horizons Press, 2004
ISBN 10: 0914914189 ISBN 13: 9780914914181
Da: Katsumi-san Co., Cambridge, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. Publication date not specified; likely published in 2004 or 2003. 136 p. [otob: 16].
Da: Take Five Books, Ashland, OR, U.S.A.
Copia autografata
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good+. Edition Not Stated. Author's business card taped to inside, front cover. Inscribed by Author(s).
PAPERBACK. Paperback edition. 136pp, octavo. tight binding, clean throughout, clean and colorful wraps, crisp pages, Fine.
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Uniquest ; Unitarian Church, Romania, 1999
ISBN 10: 9739925405 ISBN 13: 9789739925402
Da: Katsumi-san Co., Cambridge, MA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione Copia autografata
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. Inscribed on the half-title page by the translator, Judit Gellerd, who struggled for two decades to get her late father's manuscripts published as this book. Binding has wear; fore-edge margins of the copyright page and the page opposite each have a small bit of minor soil; bottom of one leaf has a very small chip; bottom margins at back have small area of minor wear; tight, text clean. xiv, [2], 311 p. Interesting provenance. [J]. Signed by Author(s).
Da: BennettBooksLtd, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condizione: New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title!
Editore: Center for Free Religion, 1990
Paperback. Condizione: NEAR FINE. 91pp. Perfectbound in printed soft covers. Spine is gently sunned. Scarce and out of print. Exceedingly clean and unmarked copy. 'Gell?rd Imre was born in 1920 after Transylvania was ceded to Romania in an attempt to breakup the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Fatherless before five, he was sent to the village of his mother's relatives where he was a shepherd. But this 'exceptional talent' (as he was always known throughout his lifetime) was soon discovered. He progressed and eventually would begin a university education in Kolozsv?r, the old Hungarian city and capital of Transylvania. Besides the Unitarian Seminary he studied in four more faculties, unusual at that times, and passing exams in each. He graduated during the Second World War and was sent to Sz?kely-Kerest?r, the second great center of Unitarian culture and learning. All other ministers and the faculty of the Unitarian college had fled. He did everything there: director and sole lecturer in the college, minister to the district. He did brilliantly and was recognized as one of the greatest talents among Unitarians for decades. When the Romanian Communist Party won the elections in 1948, he was faced with life-defining choices. He had joined the party as a Christian socialist, an idealist and theoretician. The college was nationalized and he was invited to be the representative of the Hungarian minority in Bucharest. He chose instead to be the pastor a Unitarian village church. He was immediately expelled from the party. In Simenfalva Gell?rd focused entirely on preaching and pastoring, believing that the divine kingdom could be created in a village by its people becoming fully human--by becoming like Jesus in their actions. Gell?rd Imre had conceived of a new discipline within practical theology, that of the history of the literature of sermons. He became the first (and possibly the last) person to read through thousands of handwritten manuscripts from the founding of Transylvanian Unitarianism in the sixteenth century through the present. his writing were painstakingly gathered up by his daughter, Gell?rd Judit, a medical doctor who had immigrated to Hungary. Over a period of ten years she collected copies of his writings: his sermons, poems, songs, novels, thesis and dissertation. Some things were confiscated at the Hungarian-Romanian border. Finally, in California she got the chance to translate her father's work for the world.' -George M. Williams, preface.