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Publicado por Jewish Publication Society of America, 1982
ISBN 10: 0827602103ISBN 13: 9780827602106
Librería: ThriftBooks-Atlanta, AUSTELL, GA, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Paperback. Condición: Fair. No Jacket. Readable copy. Pages may have considerable notes/highlighting. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 1.01.
Publicado por JPS, 1982
Librería: Schoen Books, South Deerfield, MA, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: SNEAB
Condición: Good +. Location: 162 pp. Yiddish with English translation.
Publicado por The Jewish Publication Society Of America, Philadelphia, 1982
Librería: The Book Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
IN ENGLISH AND YIDDISH 15X22.5 cm. xxv+166 pages. Softcover. Cover slightly chafed. Stickers on back cover. Spine slightly chafed. Else in good condition. The book is in : English Yiddish.
Publicado por Grup Idish
Librería: Robinson Street Books, IOBA, Binghamton, NY, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Condición: Used; Acceptable. Prompt shipment, with tracking. we ship in CLEAN SECURE BOXES NEW BOXES Fair condition. A very rare volume by Yiddish-language modernist poet Moyshe-Leyb (Moshe Leib) Halpern (1886-1932). No dust jacket, cover and spine very worn at edges, spine cracked. Pages tanned but clean, with black and white illustrations. Self portrait sketch frontispiece. Front endpapers detached but present.
Publicado por Grup Idish, Cleveland, Ohio, 1924
Librería: Meir Turner, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
Libro
Hardcover. Condición: Very Good. No Jacket. 301, [1] pages. 209 x 160 mm. Illustrated. Self portrait as frontispiece. WoldCat: Libraries worldwide that own item: 2. Moyshe-Leyb Halpern (January 2, 1886 ¿ August 31, 1932) was a Yiddish-language modernist poet. He was born and raised in a traditional Jewish household in Zlotshev, Galicia and brought to Vienna at the age of 12 in 1898 to study commercial art. He then began writing modernist poetry in German. Upon returning to his hometown in 1907, he switched to writing in Yiddish. In order to avoid the military draft, Halpern emigrated to New York City in 1908 where he became associated with a group of Yiddish poets called Di Yunge (The Young Ones). He published his first book of poetry in 1919, In nyu york (In New York). That same year he married Rayzele Barron. His son, now called Isaac Halpern, was born in 1923. His second book, Di goldene pave (The Golden Peacock), was published in 1924. Halpern also wrote for satirical magazines and Frayhayt (Freedom), a communist Yiddish newspaper. He died of a heart attack in New York in 1932. Halpern's importance can be measured in the 50 poems and 400 articles written from 1932 to 1954 on him by his contemporaries, some of whom include Jacob Glatstein, Itzik Manger, and Mani Leib.