Editore: Hutchinson,uk, 1943
Da: S.Carter, NEWPORT, Regno Unito
Prima edizione
EUR 6,08
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Very Good. 1st Edition. UK1ST.EDITIION.1ST.PRINTING.NEAR VG TIGHT HARDBACK.NO DUSTWRAPPER.THIS COPY HAS PREVIOUS OWNERS NAME ON HA;F TITLE PAGE.
Editore: Howard Fertig 1969, 1969
Da: Hard to Find Books NZ (Internet) Ltd., Dunedin, OTAGO, Nuova Zelanda
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
EUR 26,25
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloSuper octavo, navy blue cloth boards with gilt lettering to spine, 523pp, VG+ (v slight tanning to page edges, small mark to front board).
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: London, Victor Golancz Ltd., 1939
Da: West Coast Rare Books, Westport, MAYO, Irlanda
EUR 52,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: Sehr gut. Left Book Club Edition. 21 x 13 cm. 523 pages. Original paper covered bopards. Hard cover. Black titles. Very good condition. Minor shelf wear, rubbing and bumping. Edges and end papers age darkened. Internally very clean.
Editore: Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1939
Da: Francis Edwards ABA ILAB, Hay on Wye, Regno Unito
Prima edizione
EUR 33,44
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello1st Ed. 523pp. + [i]. 3 maps. Ex.-libris J.H. Freeman with review slip a copy of his TLS review loosely inserted and his mainly marginal pencil markings, gilt lettered black cloth, minor rubbing, upper corners sl. bumped, gilt dulled to spine. J. H. Freeman was a prominent book reviewer for the Times Literary Supplement (TLS) during the 1930s and 1940s. He specialized in evaluating literature concerning Germany, the rise of the Nazi regime, and World War II affairs. US$37.
Lingua: Slovacco
Editore: V Praze, Orbis-Praha, 1946
Da: Westside Stories, Hamilton, ON, Canada
EUR 159,93
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Good. No Jacket. Assumed First. A Solid Book Showing Some Aging And Wear On The Outer Boards. The Text Is Clean And Clear. This Book Is Signed On The Half Title Pager By Dr Edvard Benes, A Notable Diplomat And Politician Who Played A Pivotal Role In Czechoslovakia's Independence And Served As President During Significant Historical Events. The Signature Is Authenticated By An Enclosed Supporting Letter Letter Dated 1947 From Kancellar Presidenta Republiky And Signed By Dr Sykora. Also Tipped In Are Newspaper Cuttings In Slovak , One Particularly About The Foreign Minister At The Time Jan Masaryka. The Boards Are Cream, Gently Aged With The E=Initials Eb In Red On The Front Board. The Spine In Beige Linen With Red Title. Bumping To Lower Tips And Minor Knocking Along The Bottom Edge. A Great Collectible!! By Subject.
Editore: London, published by the Czechoslovka Maccabi; New York (1942) copied by the Czechoslovak Information Service., 1942
Da: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, U.S.A.
No Binding. Condizione: Good. (HOLOCAUST) RIPKA, Dr. Hubert. We Think of You. London, published by the Czechoslovka Maccabi; New York (1942) copied by the Czechoslovak Information Service. Mimeographed from the original typed sheets. 15 leaves. Stapled at upper left (once upon a time for binding), but now completely disbound. Dusting on the front and rear pages. FAIR to NEAR-GOOD condition. Provenance: Library of Congress, with their 12mm "LC" perforated stamp on front cover bottom, plus a rubber stamp for reception of the work in May 1942 on the back of the front page; also a surplus rubber stamp on the last page. [++] "The broadcast last September 18 [1941] by Hubert Ripka, Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs in the Czech government-in-exile, in which he urged Czechs to maintain their solidarity with their Jewish fellow citizens, appears today in booklet form under the auspices of the Czechoslovakian Maccabi here. Entitled We Think of You, the booklet contains a summary of anti-Jewish legislation and persecution in Czechoslovakia under the Nazis. It appeals to Jews all over the world to support the Czech cause which is also the fight of Czechoslovak Jewry. -- "Czech Maccabis Issue Booklet Recounting Nazi Terror in Czechoslovakia"--Jewish Telegraph Agency, Dec 18, 1941 (online, their site). [+=] Rupka left Czechoslovakia as a refugee for government in exile in Paris; when the French were defeated, he moved on to London, where he delivered this enormously sympathetic and supportive address and published its text. As stated in the work, the speech was made to the "humiliated and persecuted Jewish inhabitants in the temporarily enslaved Czechoslovakia". He said "Czechoslovak Jews, we think of you with sincere sympathy in these days. We know of your sufferings and we carefully assemble all the data about the way in which you are persecuted and the people who persecute you We know everything, even the details. We cannot help you for the present. But we tell the world about your sufferings and we assure you that they will not be forgotten. ".