Search results for ""Author Nava Semel""
Gefen Publishing House Fanny and Gabriel
£17.09
Lóguez Ediciones Clases de vuelo
?A veces me despierto en las noches de lluvia, cuando las gotas golpean contra los cristales, tanteo buscando mis zapatillas y meto los dos pies a la vez en ellas. Abro la ventana, aspiro profundamente el aire limpio y miro hacia el taller de zapatería.El taller está en la oscuridad, envuelto como en una manta y espera a que, por fin, se haga de día. Pero sobre él, muy pegado a la copa de los árboles, vuela el señor Maurice Havivel, con una fila de puntas en la boca y, en cada mano, un zapato blanco como la nieve?.La historia de Hadara, una chica que quiere huir de la estrechez de su mundo.
£9.55
Mandel Vilar Press Isra-Isle: A Novel
This novel is inspired by a true historical event. Before Theodore Herzl there was Mordecai Manuel Noah, an American journalist, diplomat, playwright, and visionary. In September 1825 he bought Grand Island, downriver from Niagara Falls, from the local Native Americans as a place of refuge for the Jewish people and called it "Ararat." But no Jews came. What if they had followed Noah's call? In Nava Semel's alternate history Jews from throughout the world flee persecution and come to Ararat. Isra Isle becomes the smallest state in the US. Israel does not exist, and there was no Holocaust. In exploring this what-if scenario, Semel stimulates new thinking about memory, Jewish/Israeli identity, attitudes toward minorities, women in top political positions, and the place of cultural heritage. The novel is divided into three parts. Part 1, a detective story, opens in September 2001 when Liam Emanuel, an Israeli descendant of Noah, learns about and inherits this island. He leaves Israel intending to reclaim this "Promised Land" in America. Shortly after he arrives in America Liam disappears. Simon T. Lenox, a Native American police investigator, tries to recover Israel's "missing son." Part 2 flashes back to the time and events surrounding Mordecai Noah's purchase of the island from the local Native Americans. Part 3 poses an alternate history: the rise of a successful modern Jewish city-state, Isra Isle, on the northern New York and Canadian border--a metropolis that looks remarkably like New York City both before and after 9/11--in which the Jewish female governor campaigns to become president of the United States. Nava Semel has published novels, short stories, poetry, plays, children's books, and a number of TV scripts. Her books have been translated and published in many countries. Her book, Becoming Gershona, received the 1990 National Jewish Book Award in the US.
£13.97