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Verlag: Keter Yerushalayim Ltd., Jerusalem, Israel, 1978
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). In Hebrew, vowelized. 32 oages, 243 x 163 mm. Illustrated,
Verlag: Papyrus Publishing House, 2001
ISBN 10: 9653062034ISBN 13: 9789653062030
Anbieter: HPB-Emerald, Dallas, TX, USA
Buch
hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Gutman, Nachum (illustrator). Connecting readers with great books since 1972! Used books may not include companion materials, and may have some shelf wear or limited writing. We ship orders daily and Customer Service is our top priority!.
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Verlag: Masada, Tel Aviv, Israel, 1958
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Good. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). In Hebrew, vowelized. (8), 383 pages. 21 x 14 cm. David Shimoni (Shimonovich)(August 25, 1891 Bobruisk, Minsk Province, Russian Empire, now Belarus - December 10, 1956 Tel Aviv, Israel) was a Hebrew poet, writer, translator and teacher. In 1902 his poem "Sikhat Resisim" was published in Ben Avigdor's children's weekly "Olam Katan." His poems were printed in the "Luakh Ahiasaf", in "HaShiloakh" and in other Hebrew newspapers and anthologies. He briefly painted revolutionary posters in Russian and wrote for Unser Veig, Folks Shtime and others. In 1908 he received his matriculation certificate, but was not admitted to the university because of a quota limitation on Jewish students (the Numerus Klausus). In 1909, Shimoni immigrated to Eretz Israel, stayed, befriended Yosef Chaim Brenner, with whom he had already corresponded earlier. Shimoni worked in Eretz Israel as a guard and orange picker and traveled in Israel for two months. For the rest of his life he carried his experiences from this trip. In 1911 Shimoni returned to visit his parents in Russia, and in the same year his first book of poems "Yashimon" (=Wasteland) was published. In 1912 he went to Germany for higher education. Until 1914 he studied Semitic linguistics and philosophy at the universities of Berlin, Heidelberg and Würzburg. Upon graduation he intended to return to Israel, but World War I broke out and he was forced to return to Russia, staying in Odessa and St. Petersburg. With the outbreak of the October Revolution he moved to Moscow, where he worked at the Stiebel publishing house. In 1920, after many attempts, he manage to leave the Soviet Union and return to Israel. At first he lived in Rehovot and pursued literature full time. Dvir Publishing published a selection of his writings. In 1925 he moved to Tel Aviv where he served as a teacher of Hebrew and Hebrew literature at the Hebrew Gymnasium "Herzliya". To the end of his life, he taught Bible and Hebrew literature in high schools. He also translated from the best world literature (Tolstoy, Heine, Lermontov, etc.). He won the Bialik Prize for Literature in 1936 and 1949, the Ussishkin Prize in 1945, and in 1954 he was awarded the Israel Prize for Fine Literature.
Verlag: Tel Aviv, Massada Press, (1967)., 1967
Anbieter: Grant's Bookshop, Cheltenham, VIC, Australien
107pp. 4to. Original cloth in rubbed dustwrapper. Decorated endpapers. Tipped in photographic portrait on half title. Further tipped in illustrations placed throughout introduction. Coloured and monochrome plates. A very good copy.
Verlag: Massada, 1979
Anbieter: The Book Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
28x21.5 cm. No pagination. Hardcover. Cover slightly bumped at corners and edges. Sticker sign on bottom rear cover. Spine slightly bumped at edges. Age stains on first and last white pages. Ex-library copy with the usual marks. Else in good condition. The book is in : Hebrew English French.
Verlag: Merkaz Hamorim biYerushalayim, Jerusalem, Israel, 1929
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Soft cover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Cover and half title by the great Nachum Gutman (illustrator). Limited Edition of 2000 Copies. In Hebrew. 11 x 8.5 inches. 439 pages. Includes Yaari's bibliography of children's books and education books. Many chapters dealing with education in Israel. e.g.: the first Hebrew school in Israel, the first Hebrew kindergarten, Hebrew school in Damascus, developments after world war I, the first school in Jerusalem etc.
paperback. Zustand: Good+. Illustrated d/jkt, in protective tissue, over stiff card wrappers; binding intact, if slightly weak. Hebrew text. Charming monochrome pen drawings of civilian and military life in the early days of post-independence Israel. NB -- book opens left to right. ; 4to (9" x 12").
Verlag: Merkaz Hamorim biYerushalayim, Jerusalem, Israel, 1929
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Cover and half title by the great Nachum Gutman (illustrator). Limited Edition of 2000 Copies. In Hebrew. 11 x 8.5 inches. 439 pages. Includes Yaari's bibliography of children's books and education books. Many chapters dealing with education in Israel. e.g.: the first Hebrew school in Israel, the first Hebrew kindergarten, Hebrew school in Damascus, developments after world war I, the first school in Jerusalem etc.
Verlag: Merkaz Hamorim biYerushalayim, Jerusalem, Israel, 1929
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Soft cover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Cover and half title by the great Nachum Gutman (illustrator). Limited Edition of 2000 Copies. In Hebrew. 11 x 8.5 inches. 439 pages. Includes Yaari's bibliography of children's books and education books. Many chapters dealing with education in Israel. e.g.: the first Hebrew school in Israel, the first Hebrew kindergarten, Hebrew school in Damascus, developments after world war I, the first school in Jerusalem etc.
Verlag: Nisan Peleg Graphic Services [undated, post 1967 war], 49 Derech HaShalom, Givatayim, Israel, 1967
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Soft cover. Zustand: Good. Iris, Avi, graphics by (illustrator). In Hebrew. 30 x 16 cm. 42 pages. Spiral bound. wrappers detached.
Zustand: Very Good. Israel: Masada Publishing House, 1981. Sm 4to hardcover. 119 pp. Illustrations. Hebrew. Very good book. (books in hebrew, children, fiction) Inquire if you need further information.
Verlag: Keter House
Anbieter: GridFreed, North Las Vegas, NV, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: New. Has original drawing from maybe artist on title page. Otherwise unused. Looks like an interesting title!.
Verlag: Keter Publishing House, Jerusalem, 1979
Anbieter: M.POLLAK ANTIQUARIAT Est.1899, ABA, ILAB, Tel-Aviv, Israel
Buch
Original Cloth, with d/j. Zustand: Very Good. Some 70 unnumbered pages. Richly illustrated. English and Hebrew text.DJ with minimal marginal wear otherwise a very good and clean copy.
Hard Cover. Zustand: Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. First Edition; First Printing. Numerous full page color plates. Text in Hebrew. ; Tight, clean and crisp. A hint of very light shelf wear to dustjacket with one tape repaired short tear to top at rear, otherwise in excellent condition and now protected in a new Mylar cover. No inscriptions. No remainder mark. Not price clipped. Not ex-library. ; 4to; 142 pages.
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: None. Type: Hebrew VERY GOOD/NO DUST JACKET as Issued. IN HEBREW. Interior is clean and bright, with a small tear at free rear endpaper. Illustrated throughout with woodblock prints by Nachum Gutman. Decorated olive wood covers in very good condition.
Verlag: Omanuth Omanut [Undated. Probably c. 1935], [Tel Aviv, Eretz Israel], 1935
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Good. No Jacket. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). In Hebrew. Pages [gimel] to mem vav [= 3 to 46] Newly bound in hard cover. Lacking original wrappers and title page.170 x 126 mm.
Verlag: [Publisher and date not given. Probably Dvir Devir pulishing 1920's 1920s ir 1930s], 1930
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. [Probably by:] Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). In Hebrew, vowelized (with nikud). Two stories: Hashual vehaDov pages 45 to 54 HaZe'ev haTipesh pages [55] to 64. 216 x 149 mm Large bold type. Excellent quality paper. "[Kipnis was an] author of children's Hebrew literature. Born in Ushomir, Volhynia, he went to Erez Israel in 1913, studied at the Bezalel School of Arts, and taught in a kindergarten. After a period of study in Germany in 1923 he joined the staff of the Lewinsky Teachers' Seminary in Tel Aviv. [He] also wrote children's stories in Yiddish and.edited the journals for kindergarten teachers, Gannenu and Hedha-Gan. In 1978 he was the recipient of the Israel Prize for children's literature. A collection of essays examining the influence of Kipnis on Hebrew children's literature was published under Iyyunim bi-Y? Irat Levin Kipnis in 1982.
Verlag: OVID-DVIR, TEL-AVIV, 1959
Anbieter: NUDEL BOOKS, New York, NY, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. 1st Edition. Large 4to, HEBREW TEXT, Decorated, grey pebbled boards, 264pp, with charming b&w illus by Gutman.(Sjdc).
Verlag: Am Oved Ltd Publishers and the Dvir Company Ltd, Tel Aviv, Israel, 1959
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. 286 x 210 mm. 262 pages. Hebrew text. Book written an dillustrated by the great artist Nachum Gutman. Large volume. Front bank endpaper has dedeicaiton in Hebrew: "To Michael, upon his reaching his Bar Mitzva. From Yosi Poper." The half title has a purple ink stamp in Hebrew:" Y. M. Goldberger. Tel Aviv, H"N Boulevard, Tel Aviv." The boulevard is named after Haim Nachman Bialik. Nachum Gutman (as he himself signed;[Alternate romanisation: Nahum Gutman¿: October 15, 1898 ¿ November 28, 1980) was an Israeli painter, sculptor, and author. He was born in Telene¿ti, Bessarabia Governorate, then a part of the Russian Empire (now in the Republic of Moldova). He was the fourth child of Sim[c]ha Alter and Rivka Gutman. His father was a Hebrew writer and educator who wrote under the pen name S. Ben Zion. In 1903, the family moved to Odessa, and two years later, to Ottoman Palestine. In 1908, Gutman attended the Herzliya Gymnasium in what would later become Tel Aviv. In 1912, he studied at the Bezalel School in Jerusalem. In 1920¿26, he studied art in Vienna, Berlin and Paris. Gutman was married to Dora, with whom he had a son. After Gutman's death in 1980, Dora asked two Tel Aviv gallery owners, Meir Stern of Stern Gallery and Miriam Tawin of Shulamit Gallery, to appraise the value all of the works left in his estate. Gutman's studio, Nahum Gutman Museum of Art Gutman helped pioneer a distinctively Israeli style, moving away from the European influences of his teachers. He worked in many different media: oils, watercolours, gouache and pen and ink. His sculptures and brightly colored mosaics can be seen in public places around Tel Aviv. Indoor murals depicting the history of Tel Aviv can be seen in the western wing of the Shalom Tower and the Chief Rabbinate building. A mosaic fountain with scenes from the early days of Tel Aviv and biblical stories connected to Jaffa (inscribed with 3 Bible verses: Jeremiah 31:4, 2 Chronicles 2:16, Jonah 1:3), stood for 32 years at the end of Bialik Street, opposite the old Tel Aviv municipality building. In 2012 this mosaic fountain was reinstalled at the southern end of Rothschild Boulevard. Gutman's artistic style was eclectic, ranging from figurative to abstract. Gutman was also a well-known writer and illustrator of children's books. Gutman received many art and literary prizes: 1938: Dizengoff Prize for painting (also in 1956); 1946: Lamdan Prize for children's literature; 1955: Sicily Award for watercolor painting at the São Paulo Biennale; 1956: Dizengoff Prize for painting (also in 1938); 1962: Hans Christian Andersen Literary Prize on behalf of Unesco for his book "Path of Orange Peels"; 1964: Yatziv Prize; 1969: Fichman Prize for Literature and Art; 1974: Honorary Doctor of Philosophy from Tel Aviv University; 1976: Honorary Citizen of Tel Aviv; 1978: Israel Prize, for children's literature. The Nachum Gutman Museum, showcasing the artist's work, was established in the Neve Tzedek neighborhood of Tel Aviv. Outdoor and public art: 1961 A mosaic wall at the Chief Rabbinate building, Tel Aviv; 1966 A mosaic wall at Migdal Shalom (Shalom Tower), Tel Aviv 1967 A mosaic wall for Herzliya high school, Tel Aviv; 1976 History of Jaffa and Tel Aviv, mosaic-decorated fountain, initially Bialik Square, now southern end of Rothschild Boulevard Tel Aviv.
Verlag: Ketuvim, Tel Aviv, Eretz Israel, 1929
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). In Hebrew. 44 pages. 253 x 208. With ten illustrations by NaChum Gutman. Some soiling to boards. Paper yellowed. Apparently first edition. Ten stories: 1. Ne?um Avraham Bonafyus ha-rofe 2. Amar Yehoshu?a min ha-kohanim ha-sofer 3. Asher nas?a aba V?itsintso 4. Megilat pere Rupert?os ha-kohen 5. Mi-pink?aso shel rav h?ovel 6. Tefilat ?almah 7. Mi-divre Bustena?i asher li-s?eri?at 8. Navi be-vak?buk? 9. Or zaru?a 10. Me-et ha-meh?aber.
Verlag: Dvir Devir [Undated. Probably 1920s ir 1930s], 1930
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). In Hebrew, vowelized (with nikud). 70 pages: (2), 5, 8, 8, 8, 8, 4 (apparently missing 2 leaves), 8, 8. 8, 8 pages. 215 x 144 mm WorldCat: Libraries worldwide that own item: 1 for volume 1. But this volume 2 does not appear at all. Large bold type. Excellent quality paper. Rebacked. "[Kipnis was an] author of children's Hebrew literature. Born in Ushomir, Volhynia, he went to Erez Israel in 1913, studied at the Bezalel School of Arts, and taught in a kindergarten. After a period of study in Germany in 1923 he joined the staff of the Lewinsky Teachers' Seminary in Tel Aviv. [He] also wrote children's stories in Yiddish and.edited the journals for kindergarten teachers, Gannenu and Hedha-Gan. In 1978 he was the recipient of the Israel Prize for children's literature. A collection of essays examining the influence of Kipnis on Hebrew children's literature was published under Iyyunim bi-Y? Irat Levin Kipnis in 1982.
Verlag: Devir Dvir, Tel Aviv, Eretz Israel, 1929
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). In Hebrew, vowelized (with nikud). 11, 9. 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 10, 7 (misnubered); 8 pages. Total: 100 pages. Large bold type. Excellent quality paper. Rebacked. "[Kipnis was an] author of children's Hebrew literature. Born in Ushomir, Volhynia, he went to Erez Israel in 1913, studied at the Bezalel School of Arts, and taught in a kindergarten. After a period of study in Germany in 1923 he joined the staff of the Lewinsky Teachers' Seminary in Tel Aviv. [He] also wrote children's stories in Yiddish and.edited the journals for kindergarten teachers, Gannenu and Hedha-Gan. In 1978 he was the recipient of the Israel Prize for children's literature. A collection of essays examining the influence of Kipnis on Hebrew children's literature was published under Iyyunim bi-Y? Irat Levin Kipnis in 1982.
Verlag: Mizpah Publishing Company, Ltd., Tel Aviv, Eretz Israel, 1936
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Good. No Jacket. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). 1st Edition. In Hebrew. 126, (1) pages. 204 x 142 mm. Pages yellowed and a bit shaken. WorldCat: Number of libraries worldwide that own this book: 5 (LIbrary of Congress; Harvard U.; HUC; Towson U.; SOAS U. of London). The Dolls' Trip to the Land of Israel is a children's book written by the author, poet and translator Avraham Regelson. It was first published in installments in the children's supplement of the Davar newspaper in the mid 1930s. The plot: In 1933, three year old Sharona, the daughter of the author, and her family emigrates from the United States to Eretz Israel. Sharona has to leave behind her dolls with her friend Phyllis. But the dolls miss Sharona, and they decide to travel across the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean in the wake of Sharona. They undergo many hardships and dangerous experiences on their trip, at the end of which there is an exciting encounter with Sharona. But the difficulties do not end when they arrive in Eretz Israel. Difficulties await them in Israel and cause them to question their decision to immigrate. Regelson based this story on the difficulties he and his family experienced when they immigrated to Israel. A description of some of the experiences on which the story is based were written by the real Sharona and appeared in an addendum to a 2005 edition of this work. Regelson, who wrote in Hebrew, English and Yiddish, won the very prestigious Brenner and Bialik prizes for his works. Though the book says "illustrationS" by Gutman, only 1 illustration was published. Front free endpaper has two inscriptions in Hebrew in pen: "A gift / To Hava Rachivski / From Natana Zidin" "A gift / To the children in the diaspora / From Hava Rachivski / Rehovot[,] Rehov Teler / Beit HaSefer Amami" The title page has two ink rubber stamp impressions in Hebrew: "HaBrit HaIvrit HaOlamit / Mif'al HaSefer HaIvri LaGola Hava'ad Hamerkazi Tel Aviv" ??? ????? ???? ?? ????? ????? ?????? ?-1928 ??????: ????? ??????. ?????? ??? ??, 1948, ?????? ???????. ???? (????) ??? (???? ?????). ??: ????? . ????? (???? ??????) 1889-1968. ??: ????? ?????. ???? ?????? ?? ??-??? (???????) ??? . ??-??? ???? ????? 25, 2011. ???? ???????. HAPALMACH MUSEUM: Peleg Zidin Natana. Daughter of Mordechai. Born in Israel On 1928. In The Third Battalion. In Hachsharat Ein-Gev, 1948, Hatnuah Hameuchedet. Abraham Regelson was born in Hlusk, now Belarus, in the Russian Empire in 1896, and died at his home in Neveh Monossohn, Israel in 1981. His parents were Yehuda Zeev Regelson and Rashel Ozick. He is the maternal uncle of Cynthia Ozick. Regelson emigrated with his family to the United States when he was nine years old. He studied at a heder and public schools. He never finished formal studies, but was an autodidact who spent many hours in libraries. At first he earned his livelihood as a librarian and Hebrew teacher, and began publishing his poetry, stories and translations in various Hebrew publications, both in America and in what was then early Jewish Palestine. His first aliya (immigration) to Eretz Israel was in the year 1933. Employed by the daily newspaper Davar, he was one of the founders of the children's weekly supplement Davar l'Yladim, where his well-loved classic "Masa HaBubot l'Eretz-Yisrael" ("The Dolls' Journey to Eretz Israel") was first published in installments. Three years later, after having lost an infant son, and with two of his older children endangered by malaria, he returned to the US with his family. There he earned his living by writing for the Yiddish press, while publishing several books containing his Hebrew poetry, legends and philosophical essays. After Israel's establishment, he returned there in 1949. Appointed as an editor for the publishing house Am Oved, he was also on the staff of the daily newspaper Al Ha-Mishmar, where he featured as a regular columnist. Regelson's language is uniquely original, combining the old and the new in a captivating style. His innovative usages contributed to the, , ,
Verlag: Mizpah Publishing Company, Ltd., Tel Aviv, Eretz Israel, 1935
Anbieter: Meir Turner, New York, NY, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Good. No Jacket. Gutman, Nachum (October 5, 1898 Moldavia - November 28, 1980 Israel) (illustrator). 1st Edition. In Hebrew, vowelized, in very large letters. 93, (3) pages. 203 x 140 mm. Pages yellowed. Book block a bit loose in original binding. WorldCat: Number of libraries worldwide that own this book: 2. Abraham Regelson was born in Hlusk, now Belarus, in the Russian Empire in 1896, and died at his home in Neveh Monossohn, Israel in 1981. His parents were Yehuda Zeev Regelson and Rashel Ozick. He is the maternal uncle of Cynthia Ozick. Regelson emigrated with his family to the United States when he was nine years old. He studied at a heder and public schools. He never finished formal studies, but was an autodidact who spent many hours in libraries. At first he earned his livelihood as a librarian and Hebrew teacher, and began publishing his poetry, stories and translations in various Hebrew publications, both in America and in what was then early Jewish Palestine. His first aliya (immigration) to Eretz Israel was in the year 1933. Employed by the daily newspaper Davar, he was one of the founders of the children's weekly supplement Davar l'Yladim, where his well-loved classic "Masa HaBubot l'Eretz-Yisrael" ("The Dolls' Journey to Eretz Israel") was first published in installments. Three years later, after having lost an infant son, and with two of his older children endangered by malaria, he returned to the US with his family. There he earned his living by writing for the Yiddish press, while publishing several books containing his Hebrew poetry, legends and philosophical essays. After Israel's establishment, he returned there in 1949. Appointed as an editor for the publishing house Am Oved, he was also on the staff of the daily newspaper Al Ha-Mishmar, where he featured as a regular columnist. Regelson's language is uniquely original, combining the old and the new in a captivating style. His innovative usages contributed to the rejuvenation of the Hebrew tongue. The influence of English literature added an appealing flavor to his work. He was a prolific translator and enriched Hebrew with many classics of English literature. In 1964, Regelson was awarded the Brenner Prize. In 1972, he was awarded the Bialik Prize for literature. In 1976, he won the Neuman Prize from New York University's (NYU) Hebrew Department for his contribution to Hebrew literature.