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  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    118,95 kr.

    The pogrom that swept through Poland was interpreted as a sign of the Coming of the Lord. In the little town of Goray, laid waste by murder and famine, grief becomes joy as good news arrives of the second coming of the Messiah. But such perilously high hopes pave the way to hysteria, and a panic which could threaten the very existence of Goray.

  • - Eight Stories for Hannukah
    af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    158,95 kr.

    Eight tales-one for each night of Hanukkah-demonstrating the inventive storytelling powers of Nobel Prize winner Isaac Bashevis Singer. Miracles and visitations abound in the world Singer portrays, a world in which love triumphs over time and tribulation, and faith prevails. Each story is invested with the mystical spirit of Hanukkah. "The Power of Light can enrich readers of all faiths, all ages, with its descriptions of the miraculous power of light over evil. The stories also reveal Singer's genius.''-Publishers Weekly

  • - A Story of the Baal Shem Tov
    af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    163,95 kr.

    Nobel Prize-winning author Isaac Bashevis Singer, who grew up in a strictly Orthodox Hasidic household in Poland, presents a version of the legend surrounding the 18th century founder of Hasidism known as the Baal Shem Tov. As Singer writes in his author's note, "This short book does not pretend to be a biography of Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov by any means. So little is known about his life that no life story is possible. This work is nothing more than the writer's impressions or fantasies of Rabbi Israel's way of thinking, his emotions, his spiritual achievements and disappointments."

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    158,95 kr.

    THE CAFETERIA, Based on the story by Isaac Bashevis Singer Adapted by Rhys Adrian 6 characters, doubling permitted Based on Singer's short story, "The Cafeteria," which first appeared in English in The New Yorker in 1968, this adaptation was written and produced for BBC2 Playhouse, airing on August 13, 1974. The script has been modified for this Playsmith edition to be performed as a one-act play on a bare stage with furniture and props. Minor edits have been made for the sake of live performance.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    158,95 kr.

    >10 characters, doubling permitted Based on Singer's short story, "The Joke," which first appeared in English in The New Yorker in 1970, this adaptation was written and produced for BBC2 Playhouse, airing on August 6, 1974. The script has been modified for this Playsmith edition to be performed as a one-act play on a bare stage with furniture and props. Minor edits have been made for the sake of live performance.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    93,95 kr.

    Da en ung, kvindeglad jødisk forfatter i Warszawa i 1922 får mulighed for at emigrere til Palæstina, må han finansiere rejsen ved at indgå proforma-ægteskab med én af de tre kvinder, han har et forhold til.Isaac Bashevis Singer var en polskfødt jødisk-amerikansk forfatter (1903-1991). I 1935 emigrerede han til USA, og hans værker er nok bedst kendt på engelsk, selvom de oprindeligt er skrevet på jiddisch. I centrum af hans forfatterskab er livet i jødiske landsbyer i Central- og Østeuropa før Holocaust, projiceret i en realistisk stil med et strejf af mystik – en stil, der af mange betragtes som både grotesk og obskøn. Rollelisten af karakterer stammer fra jødisk folklore og byder på alt fra synske, troldmænd, tåber, vismænd, ludere og fanatikere til djævle, dæmoner og intellektuelle. I tråd hermed afspejles indholdsmæssige kampe mellem tradition og modernitet, godt og ondt og moral. Hans forfatterskab, som omfatter romaner, noveller, børnehistorier og erindringer, gav Singer Nobelprisen i litteratur i 1978.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    93,95 kr.

    "Markernes konge" er den amerikansk-jiddische forfatter Isaac Bashevis Singers historiske roman om den tidlige middelalder i en hedensk landsby i Polen. Her opstår blodige brydninger, da en jødisk skomager ankommer - medbringende alfabetet og troen på Gud.Isaac Bashevis Singer, 1904-1991, amerikansk-jiddisch forfatter. Han blev født i Polen, men udvandrede i 1935 til USA, og hans værker er nok bedst kendt på engelsk, selvom de blev skrevet på jiddisch først. I centrum for forfatterskabet står livet i jødiske landsbyer i Central- og Østeuropa før holocaust, fremskrevet i en realistisk stil med et islæt af mystik – en stil, der af flere bliver anset for både grotesk og obskøn. Persongalleriet udspringer af jødisk folklore og byder på alt fra synske personer, troldmænd, tåber, vise, ludere, bodfærdige og fanatikere til djævle, dæmoner og intellektuelle. I tråd hermed afspejles indholdsmæssigt kampe mellem tradition og modernitet, godt og ondt og moral og liderlighed. De mandlige hovedpersoner er Don Juan-typer, der pines af samvittighedsnag, mens de drives frem af deres lidenskaber. Kvindeskikkelserne lider under Singers tvetydige eller ligefrem fjendtlige holdning. Forfatterskabet, der tæller romaner, noveller, børnefortællinger og erindringer, indbragte i 1978 Singer nobelprisen.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    139,95 kr.

    "Familien Moskat" er beretningen om en rig jødisk slægt i Warszawa gennem et par generationer frem til krigens begyndelse i 1939. I centrum står stærke og individuelle personligheder og et samfund, der generelt pulserede med liv og vitalitet. Patriarken Moskat og den verdensfjerne Bannet står i centrum for fortællingen, men bogens virkelige fokus er den civilisation, der blev ødelagt for altid i gaskamrene under Anden Verdenskrig.Isaac Bashevis Singer var en polskfødt jødisk-amerikansk forfatter (1903-1991). I 1935 emigrerede han til USA, og hans værker er nok bedst kendt på engelsk, selvom de oprindeligt er skrevet på jiddisch. I centrum af hans forfatterskab er livet i jødiske landsbyer i Central- og Østeuropa før Holocaust, projiceret i en realistisk stil med et strejf af mystik – en stil, der af mange betragtes som både grotesk og obskøn. Rollelisten af karakterer stammer fra jødisk folklore og byder på alt fra synske, troldmænd, tåber, vismænd, ludere og fanatikere til djævle, dæmoner og intellektuelle. I tråd hermed afspejles indholdsmæssige kampe mellem tradition og modernitet, godt og ondt og moral. Hans forfatterskab, som omfatter romaner, noveller, børnehistorier og erindringer, gav Singer Nobelprisen i litteratur i 1978.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    158,95 kr.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    433,95 kr.

    By the time Isaac Bashevis Singer published the three short-story collections gathered in this Library of America volume-A Friend of Kafka (1970), A Crown of Feathers (1973), and Passions (1975)-he had made his home in America for nearly four decades. Earning his living as a columnist for the Yiddish newspaper Forverts (The Jewish Daily Forward), he had risen from nearly complete anonymity outside of his Yiddish readership to international celebrity as "the last of the great Yiddish fiction writers," as Anzia Yzierska once called him. Awarded prizes, fêted in the United States and abroad, eagerly sought for lectures and interviews, he had brought about this remarkable transformation primarily though the translation of his stories. Often collaborating with his translators, Singer intended the English version of his stories to be regarded not as diminished approximations of his Yiddish stories but as works shaped by the author in the language of his adopted homeland.The sixty-five stories in Collected Stories: A Friend of Kafka to Passions-the second of three volumes-reflect Singer's origins in Poland and his long exile in America. Although he continued to write tales drawing on Jewish folk traditions and supernaturalism, many of his stories from the late 1960s and early 1970s take place in the United States, as Singer explored the psychic devastation wrought by the Nazi genocide on Holocaust survivors ("The Cafeteria"), evoked the fragility of transplanted forms of Jewish life and belief ("The Cabalist of East Broadway"), and reflected on the spiritual hazards of worldly success in America ("Old Love"). Stories such as "A Day in Coney Island," "A Tutor in the Village," and "The Son"-based on Singer's reunion with his son Israel Zamir after a twenty-year separation-show Singer blurring the line between autobiography and fiction, a tendency that marks much of his later writing.LIBRARY OF AMERICA is an independent nonprofit cultural organization founded in 1979 to preserve our nation's literary heritage by publishing, and keeping permanently in print, America's best and most significant writing. The Library of America series includes more than 300 volumes to date, authoritative editions that average 1,000 pages in length, feature cloth covers, sewn bindings, and ribbon markers, and are printed on premium acid-free paper that will last for centuries.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    433,95 kr.

    In the wake of his receiving the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1978, Isaac Bashevis Singer published several volumes of short stories in collections that mingled recent work with previously untranslated stories written in Yiddish decades earlier. Stretching back to "The Jew from Babylon," a story first published in 1932, and gathering tales such as "Brother Beetle" and "There are No Coincidences" from the 1960s, the works collected in this Library of America volume, the third of three, serve as a retrospective view of Singer's achievement as a storyteller.Collected Stories: One Night in Brazil to The Death of Methuselah also contains ten stories published in English translation for the first time, selected from the extensive collection of Singer's papers at the University of Texas. Ranging from "Between Shadows," an evocative, naturalistic sketch set in Warsaw, to the bittersweet melodrama "Morris and Timma," to the beguiling fable "Hershele and Hanele, or The Power of a Dream." These stories enrich our understanding of Singer as a writer. The volume also includes "The Bird," "My Adventures as an Idealist," "and "Exes," stories published in magazines that were not included in any of Singer's collections. Complementing the seventy-eight stories gathered here is the introduction to Gifts (1985), a version of a lecture Singer had delivered since the early 1960s-sometimes called "Why I Write as I Do"-which illuminates his biography, philosophical outlook, and literary aims.LIBRARY OF AMERICA is an independent nonprofit cultural organization founded in 1979 to preserve our nation's literary heritage by publishing, and keeping permanently in print, America's best and most significant writing. The Library of America series includes more than 300 volumes to date, authoritative editions that average 1,000 pages in length, feature cloth covers, sewn bindings, and ribbon markers, and are printed on premium acid-free paper that will last for centuries.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    93,95 kr.

    "Fjender - en historie om kærlighed" er fortællingen om en polsk jøde, der er undsluppet krigens gaskamre og efterfølgende udvandret til New York. Her lever han et liv baseret på løgn og svindel med bl. a. bigami til følge.Isaac Bashevis Singer var en polskfødt jødisk-amerikansk forfatter (1903-1991). I 1935 emigrerede han til USA, og hans værker er nok bedst kendt på engelsk, selvom de oprindeligt er skrevet på jiddisch. I centrum af hans forfatterskab er livet i jødiske landsbyer i Central- og Østeuropa før Holocaust, projiceret i en realistisk stil med et strejf af mystik – en stil, der af mange betragtes som både grotesk og obskøn. Rollelisten af karakterer stammer fra jødisk folklore og byder på alt fra synske, troldmænd, tåber, vismænd, ludere og fanatikere til djævle, dæmoner og intellektuelle. I tråd hermed afspejles indholdsmæssige kampe mellem tradition og modernitet, godt og ondt og moral. Hans forfatterskab, som omfatter romaner, noveller, børnehistorier og erindringer, gav Singer Nobelprisen i litteratur i 1978.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    598,95 kr.

    Introduction by Marc Caplan, Baton Rouge, Louisiana Although it is unsurprising that Isaac Bashevis Singer was the only Yiddish writer chosen for a Nobel Prize in Literature-the only Yiddish writer who will ever be so honored-it is equally unsurprising that this honor has caused such enduring controversy among Yiddish readers. For these readers, Bashevis's writing has been distinguished by two characteristic transgressions. His focus on the occult, rooted with intimate detail in the folklore and demonology of Polish Jewry, calls to mind superstitions that a supposedly secular Yiddish culture had been battling for nearly two centuries. And his focus on morbid and prurient sexuality equally embarrassed a readership that had never developed a taste or even tolerance for eroticism in their "respectable" literature. In both a psychological and historical sense, he confronts readers with aspects of their own culture that they would have preferred to remain consigned to a distant past. Yet in both of these tendencies, Bashevis sought to reconsider the terms that have defined Yiddish literature since its "classic" era during the nineteenth century. Specifically, the thematic and stylistic character of Bashevis's fiction stems directly from the writing of Y.L. Peretz, the writer who most greatly influenced Yiddish culture in the interwar period, particularly in Bashevis's native Poland. Where Peretz had sought to re-purpose Yiddish folklore to promote a modern, rational, humanist ethos, Bashevis mined the same tradition to exploit its irrational, bizarre, and demonic characteristics. No less an authority than Gershom Scholem, in one of his few published remarks on Yiddish literature, credited Bashevis's writing as a significant source for understanding the debts that Jewish demonology owes to Polish folklore.[1] Where Peretz sought to introduce an image of romantic love and healthy, if modest, sexuality to modern Yiddish literature-particularly through his revival of the literary fairy tale-Bashevis used the same Polish-Jewish folklore to depict sexuality as the most primitive trick in the least accomplished demons' repertoire. Bashevis grew up with two distinguished writers, crediting his brother I.J. Singer as his greatest inspiration, particularly after his brother's early death, and mostly ignoring his older sister Esther Singer Kreitman or damning her remarkable, often painfully autobiographical stories and novels with faint praise. But it was Peretz who served symbolically as the father against whom Bashevis eternally rebelled. The stories collected in this volume date from after World War II, and therefore introduce a complex of historical and social themes that deserve their own explanation. But the best among them maintain the focus on anti-rational, even supernatural themes, as well as the perversity of male-female relationships with which Bashevis's writing had distinguished itself from the 1930s. "Yentl the Yeshiva Bokher," for example-made famous by Barbara "Barbra" Streisand's 1983 film adaptation, and notorious by Bashevis's repudiation of the movie-describes a love triangle that when read as a satire of yeshiva culture includes a graphic account of a lesbian wedding night, and when understood as a literary fairy tale focuses on a hermaphroditic protagonist that in contemporary

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    163,95 kr.

    Isaac Bashevis Singer's The Mirror was written for the Yale Repertory Theater production in 1972-1973. Set in a shtetl in Poland, the play is based on Singer's 1955 story of the same name, originally narrated by the demon. It deals with sexual fantasies born of denial, neglect, and repression, delving into the netherworld to discover that demons are not very different from human beings. The play incorporates one of Singer's esoteric characters, the Jew of Babylon, a miracle worker and exorcist who is swept up into the dark that he battles each day. From the New York Times: "The Mirror . . . is an, erotic and moral fable dramatizing, among other things, the dangers of fulfilling daydreams. . . .The work is full of bizarre absurdities, magic potions, exorcisms and incantations but the author-with his tongue in cheek-never loses sight of humanity. This is Singer in a playful mood.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    163,95 kr.

    Likely written in the 1950s, Sodom is an original play by the Polish-born Jewish-American laureate of the Nobel Prize for Literature. The play, based on the biblical tale of Lot and the destruction of Sodom, treats themes to which Singer returned over throughout his career-corruption and repentance. It also exhibits Singer's ability to move between comedy, political satire, and spiritual sentiment, all within a play that is loyal to its biblical sources. Portraying with such canonical characters as Lot and Abraham, the play shifts from comedic dialogue, to critiques of totalitarianism, to expressions of awe and faith, capturing the fear and trembling of the those who believe they have seen the great powers of the Abrahamic God. The play is both a biblical comedy and a spiritual affirmation of the human need for the Divine. 24 characters, doubling and tripling permitted

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    218,95 - 348,95 kr.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    278,95 kr.

    Hertz Minsker, Jewish emigrant, self-proclaimed intellectual and true charlatan, lives at the expense of real estate magnate Morris Kálisher, a childhood friend. An inveterate seducer, he is married for the fourth time to the singer Bronie and has an affair with Minne, Morris's wife, in the same beards of their respective spouses. However, the emergence of Minne's first husband into their lives with the plan to sell Morris several forgeries of paintings by Picasso and Chagall will shake the delicate balance of their particular house of cards, giving rise to humorous disagreements and misunderstandings in the family. Originally published in installments in the New York newspaper Forverts, The Seducer is a fast-paced sitcom, as well as an extraordinary portrait of the life of Jewish emigrants in New York in the 1940s. A great novel about exile, uprooting and stateless status.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    223,95 kr.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    358,95 kr.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    168,95 kr.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    223,95 kr.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    178,95 kr.

    The Penitent tells the story of Jospeh Shapiro, his rapid climb to prosperity, his quick plunge into promiscuity, and his subsequent flight to Israel in order to find salvation.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    233,95 kr.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    283,95 kr.

    The vanished way of life of Eastern European Jews in the early part of the twentieth century is the subject of this extraordinary novel. All the strata of this complex society were populated by powerfully individual personalities, and the whole community pulsated with life and vitality. The affairs of the patriarchal Meshulam Moskat and the unworldly Asa Heshel Bannet provide the center of the book, but its real focus is the civilization that was destroyed forever in the gas chambers of the Second World War.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    233,95 kr.

    David Bendiner, a young writer and secularized Jew, has qualified to emigrate from Warsaw to Palestine, but he's broke, and in order to make the journey, he must enter into a fictitious marriage with a prosperous woman eager to get there. Grappling with romantic, political and philosophical turmoil, David must also confront his faith when his father, an Orthodox rabbi, shows up in Warsaw.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    233,95 kr.

    Meshugah, Singer's third posthumous novel, is an impressive work which the author published serially in 1981 - 83. It concerns Holocaust survivors in New York in the early 1950s. The story is narrated by Aaron Greidinger, who finds himself inextricably invloved with a group of refugees on the Upper West Side.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    313,95 kr.

    "Stories by Isaac Bashevis Singer"--Cover.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    233,95 kr.

    Twenty stories from the Nobel Prizewinner, including "Disguised," a transvestite tale of the yeshiva student whose deserted wife finds him dressed as a woman and married to a man, and the title story, which portrays Methuselah at the age of 969 -- "and when you pass your nine hundredth birthday, you are not what you used to be."

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    233,95 kr.

    A fictional exploration of primitive history, Singer's novel portrays an age of superstition and violence in a country emerging from the darkness of savagery. Part parable of modern civilization, part fascinating historical novel, it reaffrims the author's reputation as a master storyteller.

  • af Isaac Bashevis Singer
    223,95 kr.

    An authentic literary great, Singer was an author whose extraordinary talents won him a worldwide audience. And with this impressive novel, he proved that he was at the height of his creative power until his recent death at age 86. Scum evokes the teeming life of 1906 Warsaw's backstreets. Max Barabander, distraught over the recent death of his son, flees the life of wealth and respectability he has attained in Buenos Aires, to return to the poverty and shadows of his youth spent in Warsaw. He fears impotence which leads him to the pursuit of mindless sex with five different women who view him only as an escape from their drab lives. The author recalls the teeming life of 1906 Jewish Warsaw in this impressive novel of changing mores and values. . .