• Dancing on a Powder Keg

    Dancing on a Powder Keg

    Created by: Ilse Weber
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Ilse Weber’s letters document the life of a young Jewish author of children’s book, as she and her family were gradually trapped and persecuted in Nazi occupied Czechoslovakia. Her poems, written and performed in the Theresienstadt Ghetto, have become an international symbol of the camp and ghetto poetry. Ilse saved her older son, but she and her younger son were gassed in Auschwitz.

    $39.95
  • Seizing Ivy: A Pompey Story

    Seizing Ivy: A Pompey Story

    Created by: Barbara Parsons
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    At once poignant and humorous, this is the touching story of a proud woman’s painful adjustments to the realities of aging, changing standards, and mother-daughter misapprehensions.

    $16.95
  • David Lazar A Novel

    David Lazar A Novel

    Created by: Robert Kalich
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Robert Kalich blurs the lines between memoir and fiction to tell a timeless story of love and redemption, with a dash of noir.

    David Lazar is a born and bred New Yorker reflecting on the arc of his life as he composes his memoir. Filled with colorful New York characters–childhood friends, business mentors, wealthy associates, organized crime figures, celebrities, and sports stars–and told by a complex and compelling narrator, the city from the 1950s up to the present comes alive. The Big Apple is Lazar’s cradle and his cauldron, and a life like Lazar’s is unique to New York City.

    A professional sports gambler, Lazar is haunted by the immoral nature of the very work that made him rich. His innermost being is shaken as he reimagines the dehumanizing nature of his work and former life. Did he sell his soul to make it? Is there redemption for wealth based on corruption and violence? If he is completely honest, does he risk losing what he cherishes the most: the love and respect of his wife and son? Lazar has a decision to make. This is the story of a perilous journey into the soul of a man who risks losing far more than he’s ever won.

    Welcome to the world of David Lazar, the world of doubt and self-doubt, where life is lived as a novel and a novel is truer than life.

    $24.50
  • Our Lady of Steerage

    Our Lady of Steerage

    Created by: Steven Mayoff
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    The visceral connection between Dvorah, rejected infant of grieving mother, and Mariasse, a young girl from Krakow, who nurses her in the lower decks of the ship carrying them to the new world. For four decades they wander in and out of each other’s lives, their relationship weathering fierce devotion and bitter betrayal. Its image-driven prose manifests the vagaries of memory and the struggle for self-reinvention.

    $26.95
  • The Same Old Story

    The Same Old Story

    Created by: Ivan Goncharov
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Goncharov’s first novel, Obyknovennaya istoriya or “The Same Old Story,” wittily presents the conflicts between the excessive romanticism of a young Russian nobleman freshly arrived in Saint Petersburg from the provinces and the sober pragmatism of his bourgeois uncle. It appeared in 1847 in the periodical “The Contemporary,” and created a sensation, marking the debut of one of Russia?s greatest writers. It deserves an equal place with Goncharov’s classic Oblomov.

    $19.99
  • Baldwin Street

    Baldwin Street

    Created by: Alvin Rakoff
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Leonard Abelson is one of seven children. He lives above Abelson’s Hardware on Baldwin Street in Kensington Market in Toronto. It’s the 1930s. Leonard’s father, Sam, a former merchant sailor who speaks fourteen languages, does the purchasing for the store; his mother, Pearl, a Ukranian ?migr? who was a victim of pogroms and marauding Cossacks after WWI, runs the shop floor. Leonard wants to be a writer. He witnesses the affections, struggles, and meager hopes of his neighbors?fuel for his imagination. Periodically, Leonard has to look after a young philosophy professor from the University of Toronto, Menasha Rifkin, who suffers from fugue states, squatting among the stalls on Baldwin Street reading Spinoza, Kant, and the Globe & Mail. Halloween 1936. A band of young Italians invades Baldwin Street in search of blood. Marshall McDonald, the Irish cop who failed to quell the famous ?Wop? vs. ?Yid? riot at Christie Pits six years earlier, now must investigate the death of Bernie Altman, a young boy whose senseless slaughter lingers over the Jewish community like a bad dream. In the tradition of James T. Farrell’s Studs Lonigan and Nelson Algren’s Man with the Golden Arm, Alvin Rakoff’s Baldwin Street is literary fiction at its best. This powerful novel presents a vivid mosaic of characters, the rich fa

    $28.00
  • The Grieving Time A Year's Account of Recovery from Loss

    The Grieving Time A Year's Account of Recovery from Loss

    Created by: Anne Brooks
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Like the millions of people who face a time of grieving, Anne Brooks looked desperately for something to read that would offer comfort after her husband’s death. Finding nothing that moved her, she began a monthly journal about the deeply personal side of her loss, her loneliness, and her struggle to come to terms with her independence and her new self. The Grieving Time is the intensely moving and deeply comforting account of her recovery-enduring today as the best book for grieving spouses or anyone facing the loss of a loved one through death or divorce. Thousands of counselors, psychologists, social workers, health care providers, ministers, and hospice workers have found it to be one of the most helpful books in their libraries-a testament to its universal significance and appeal.

    $8.99
  • Withdrawal Symptoms Light Verse for All Weights

    Withdrawal Symptoms Light Verse for All Weights

    Created by: William Walden
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Over the past fifty years William Walden’s poems-collected here for the first time-have been widely published in the United States and England. In the tradition of Ogden Nash, Walden appeals to both literary and popular sensibilities. His poems elevate the humble and deflate the pompous, celebrate quotidian truths and debunk accepted ones. Incisive and humorous, Walden is a conversational and companionable poet, a wry observer who brings everyman’s eyes and ears to the complexities of modern life and culture while offering a wink and a nod to the literati.

    $15.00
  • River and the Horsemen A Novel of Little Bighorn

    River and the Horsemen A Novel of Little Bighorn

    Created by: Robert Skimin
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    The most compelling account of the Little Bighorn ever written, this powerfully detailed historical novel vividly recreates the lives of two of the most celebrated military leaders of nineteenth-century North America, General George Armstrong Custer and Chief Sitting Bull. Capturing in rich detail native Sioux spirituality and culture, as well as the history and politics of post-Civil War America, the Battle of the Little Bighorn itself, described in all of its frightening detail, is the riveting climax to an artfully portrayed collision of two civilizations: one reaching for its manifest destiny, one struggling for survival.

    $19.00
  • Peace, Justice, and Jews Reclaiming Our Tradition

    Peace, Justice, and Jews Reclaiming Our Tradition

    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    The choice between extolling uncritically whatever Israel decides to do to others, and maintaining the Jewish commitment to justice, has created, for Jews, a profound moral crisis. Are Jews to adopt a form of Judaism that uncritically reveres Israel as the only safeguard against genocide? Or should Jews retain their ancient belief that only where human rights are respected for all can Jews find true security and equality?In this landmark collection of contemporary Jewish thought, Polner and Merken have drawn on the work of a wide variety of thinkers and activists in Israel and the USincluding charity workers, political demonstrators, conscientious objectors, prison workers, animal rights advocates, mothers and fathers, refuseniks, rabbis, soldiers, journalists, and professorsto answer this important question.These voices support the second choiceto pursue human rights as the key to securitya view nourished during two millennia of the Diaspora, and which has proudly seen Jews at the forefront of struggles for civil rights, labor rights, anti-militarism, and compassion for the most vulnerable among us: the poor, the hungry, the helpless, the oppressed.

    $29.00
  • Oblomov

    Oblomov

    Created by: Ivan Goncharov
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Even though Ivan Goncharov wrote several books that were widely read and discussed during his lifetime, today he is remembered for one novel, Oblomov, published in 1859, an indisputable classic of Russian literature, the artistic stature and cultural significance of which may be compared only to other such masterpieces as Nikolai Gogol’s Dead Souls, Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, and Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Brothers Karamazov. Stephen Pearl’s new translation, the first major English-language publication of Oblomov in more than fifty years, succeeds exquisitely to introduce this astonishing and endearing novel to a new generation of readers.Review”[Goncharov is ten heads above me in talent.”—Anton Chekhov(Anton Chekhov )“Oblomov is a truly great work, the likes of which one has not seen for a long, long time. I am in rapture over Oblomov and keep rereading it.”—Leo Tolstoy(Leo Tolstoy )

    $20.00
  • You Are as Young as Your Spine

    You Are as Young as Your Spine

    Created by: Editha Hearn
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    This book is written for all those who suffer from back problems, and the neck pain, rheumatism, sciatica, and other pain they cause. Editha Hearn explains scientifically, though in plain language, why these problems are so common and why the origin of backache is usually related to the spine.

    $12.95
  • Mendel Rosenbusch, Tales for Jewish Children

    Mendel Rosenbusch, Tales for Jewish Children

    Created by: Isle Weber
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Mendel Rosenbusch lives in a small house behind the synagogue in a rural village. All the children love Mendel – he always has a bowl of delicious baked goods when they visit him on the Sabbath. Decent, friendly people love Mendel without knowing what makes him so likeable; while stingy, unfriendly people frown at him without knowing why. Mendel Rosenbusch seems to know everything, and he has a wonderful gift for reading in people’s eyes their most secret thoughts. You see, Mendel has a secret. One night an angel appeared and gave him ma magic coin. When Mendel puts it in his pocket, he becomes invisible. That was the wonderful gift God gave him for being so kind-hearted. Do you wonder what Mendel Rosenbusch does with his magic invisibility?

    $18.95
  • Final Judgement

    Final Judgement

    Created by: Eliot Asinof
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Famous author, Kenneth Flear, becomes a creative writing professor at an eminent university. A brilliant college senior invites the professor to support her protest to prevent President George W. Bush from delivering the keynote at her commencement. After her self-sacrifice stops the president, Flear is commissioned to write a drop-in bestseller about the incident that ultimately asserts the insanity of the student. Attending Book Expo America in Washington D.C. in May 2006, the professor is featured at an author breakfast and panel discussion. With booksellers everywhere in foment over the book’s conclusions, readers must make a final judgment for themselves.

    $20.00
  • Clyde

    Clyde

    Created by: David Helwig
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Betrayed by his oldest friend, a boyhood companion, his gingerly constructed career at stake, Clyde Bryanton, a property developer and Ottawa political consultant, unpeels layers and layers of memory, a half century of getting along by going along. Fatherless, his sire a casualty of the Dieppe raid, Clyde is as baffled by the emotions that occasionally sound from his depths as he is by his mentors, banker and the senator who manipulate money and power in a small Canadian city. A stranger even to his wife, who dubs him ‘Silent Joe,’ he navigates social, familial, political and commercial obligations with the same cool skills he exhibits on the golf courses that weave in and out of the fabric of his life. The darkest of secrets become no more to Clyde than the bunkers and sand traps he avoids with his selections of irons as he gambles a mysterious five thousand dollars against access to the wife of an envied son of privilege. This latest novel by distinguished Canadian author David Helwig, describes a North America, whether Canada or the United States, of eyes on the ground and noses to the grindstone, of business as politics and politics as business, of kindness and malice and nameless fear. Clyde, is an incisive portrait of the generation that came of age in the 1960s, and of the culture that came to dominate the second half of the twentieth century.

    $18.95
  • Show Me The Way To Go Home

    Show Me The Way To Go Home

    Created by: Dorothy Schwartz
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    With near total recall, the author recreates what it was like, from a child’s point of view, to be tied to a charming, naïve single mother. The years are 1936 to 1948; the milieu, the New Jersey Oranges. Navigating the hardships of the Great Depression and the mysteries of world conflict, young Dorothy Jane asks one teacher if a war is ever ‘off.’ Show Me The Way To Go Home follows the unanchored, at times rakish, existence of a feckless mother and innocent daughter who rarely spending more than a few seasons at one address. It is a tale of resiliency and courage, of a child’s growing awareness of her predicament, and her gradually achieved maturity.

    $18.95
  • A Sunday in Hell

    A Sunday in Hell

    Created by: Daniel Berrigan
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    In addition to a selection of Berrigan’s prize-winning poetry, Sunday in Hell contains fables in which the author, at his witty best, illustrates our follies. In one, for example, a nation’s resources go into a vast hole in the ground, creating an endless demand that succors a sick economy. In a new prologue, Berrigan explores the roots of his beliefs. An afterword by Hugh MacDonald presents an Atlantic Canadian’s perspective.

    $9.99
  • Grumbling Hive Revisited Private Greed, Public Need

    Grumbling Hive Revisited Private Greed, Public Need

    Created by: Bernard Mandeville
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    In the original Grumbling Hive, dishonesty and vice created employment and wealth, inspiring Adam Smith, whose idealization of  markets is a template for today’s unbridled capitalism. In Mandeville Sr.’s  fable, a turn to honesty by his bees ( miniature Europeans) ruins the economy. In Mandeville Jr.’s  fable, bees as they are, a  community based on mutual support and selfless care, are ruined by the adoption of  unbridled capitalism.

    $8.99
  • Beulah Kettlehole and the Patriarchal Ice

    Beulah Kettlehole and the Patriarchal Ice

    Created by: Barbara Parsons
    Publisher: Bunim & Bannigan

    Bogotá, Colombia, 1971. This is the atmospheric and humorous tale of Claire Chesterton, blonde and flashy, newly posted to the British Trade delegation, who fears herself on the brink of ineligibility. A makeover brings several suitors, among them Jeremy Jooning, the delegation’s Number Three, a charming lush in a tired marriage. Claire’s cruel dismissal, upon following Jooning to New York, provides the finally spur to satisfying independence.

    $16.95