Search results for ""author marisabina russo""
Random House USA Inc The Bunnies Are Not In Their Beds
£9.46
Simon & Schuster Always Remember Me: How One Family Survived World War II
Miraculously my grandmother, my mother, and two aunts-four Jewish women of one family-managed to survive the Holocaust, each in their own way. Their stories are the ones I heard as a child sitting at the dinner table on Sunday afternoons.
£20.09
Farrar, Straus & Giroux Inc Why Is Everybody Yelling?: Growing Up in My Immigrant Family
"A wonderful book about figuring out who we are and who we want to be when we grow up. It's also about being an American-especially a first-generation American." -Roz Chast This graphic-novel debut from an acclaimed picture book creator is a powerfully moving memoir of the author's experiences with family, religion, and coming of age in the aftermath of World War II, and the childhood struggles and family secrets that shaped her. It's 1950s New York, and Marisabina Russo is being raised Catholic and attending a Catholic school that she loves-but when she finds out that she's Jewish by blood, and that her family members are Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, her childhood is thrown into turmoil. To make matters more complicated, her father is out of the picture, her mother is ambitious and demanding, and her older half-brothers have troubles, too. Following the author's young life into the tumultuous, liberating 1960s, this heartfelt, unexpectedly humorous, and meticulously illustrated graphic-novel memoir explores the childhood burdens of memory and guilt, and Marisabina's struggle and success in forming an identity entirely her own.
£15.99
St Martin's Press Why Is Everybody Yelling?: Growing Up in My Immigrant Family
It's 1950s New York, and Marisabina Russo is being raised Catholic and attending a Catholic school that she loves-but when she finds out that she's Jewish by blood, and that her family members are Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, her childhood is thrown into turmoil. To make matters more complicated, her father is out of the picture, her mother is ambitious and demanding, and her older half brothers have troubles, too. Following the author's young life from first grade to her teens in the tumultuous, liberating 1960s, this is a heartfelt, unexpectedly humorous, and meticulously illustrated memoir. In her graphic novel debut, the author explores the childhood burdens of memory and guilt, and her struggle and success in forming an identity entirely her own.
£16.56
Greenwillow Books Good-Bye, Curtis
£15.40