 | Élie Wiesel - History - 1966 - 226 pages
Allegory about a nameless stranger who sacrifices himself to save a Jewish boy, hiding in a Hungarian forest in World War 2. | |
 | Élie Wiesel - Fiction - 1964 - 179 pages
After the Second World War Michael, a young Jew, returns to his Eastern European village to contemplate the fate of his people and those who watched them go to death | |
 | Elie Wiesel - Fiction - 1988 - 217 pages
Professor Raphael Lipkin checks into a clinic for patients believing themselves to be characters from the Bible and ancient history to explore the relationship between madness ... | |
 | Élie Wiesel - Biography & Autobiography - 1981 - 157 pages
Examines the characters, personal struggles, and achievements of the important Biblical figures, Jonah, Joshua, Saul, Elijah, and Jeremiah | |
 | Norman G Finkelstein - History - 2003 - 286 pages
In a devastating new postscript to this bestselling book, Finkelstein documents the Holocaust industry's scandalous cover-up of the blackmail of Swiss banks, and in a new ... | |
 | Cécile Wajsbrot - Fiction - 2007 - 174 pages
Rescapée d'une discrète blessure amoureuse, une femme trompe la monotonie solitaire de son existence en rassemblant la nuit ses souvenirs d'un compositeur de musique autrefois ... | |
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