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Seller's Description:
Good. We flipped through this book and didn't notice any notes or underlines. There are stains or residue on the cover. The dust jacket is missing. This is an ex library book with sticker sand markings. There is staining on the text block edges. Fast Shipping-Each order powers our free bookstore in Chicago and sending books to Africa!
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. Book. Signed by Author(s) Signed by Yae? l Dayan on the front free end page. 1st edition. Hardbound in dust jacket. Minor foxing to page edges. Minor wear to dust jacket edges, otherwise very good.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. Size: 8x5x1; 1979 Hardcover Edition. Signed by author on front end paper. Small crease to inside front DJ flap. Light shelf wear to DJ. Pages clean & unmarked.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. New York: Delacorte Press/E. Friede, 1979. First edition, first printing, 1979. Chocolate brown cloth with white linen cloth spine, copper metallic spine lettering, topaz endpapers, 242 pages, color illustrated dustjacket. The book is in very good condition, looks and feels new, with sound text block, good hinges, clean pages with no names or other markings. The mylar protected dustjacket is not priceclipped and is also in very good, new-looking condition, with a small neatly closed quarter inch tear at bottom left front cover corner. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall.
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Seller's Description:
Very good in Good jacket. xiii, [1], 242 pages. Signed on the front free endpaper by the author, Yael Dayan. DJ has some wear and soiling. Includes Prologue; Book One, Amalia; Book Two, Daniel; and Book Three, Amalia. This book is filled with the dramatic truth that history books leave out--a novel of love, loss, and courage that will move and remain with its readers long after it is finished. Set in Israel during the Yom Kippur War of October 1973, this is the story of Amalia and Daniel, whose marriage is strained not only by the tensions of a bitter war, but also by the involvement and participation each of them has in the struggle. Amalia serves in a military hospital, and caught up in that painful, demanding world are Avi, a friend from Amelia's who is now an Israeli expatriate; Julie, Avi's American wife, voicing an outsider's challenge to Israel single-minded commitment; Leib, the wealthy New York surgeon whose volunteer service is partly a self-imposed penance; and, drawing them all together, the silent figure of a critically burned unidentified soldier--a disturbing paradox in a country that thinks itself too small and close-knit to have an "unknown soldier." Yaël Dayan (born 12 February 1939) is an Israeli politician and author. She served as a member of the Knesset between 1992 and 2003, and from 2008 to 2013 was the chair of Tel Aviv city council. Dayan first made a name for herself as an author and columnist, writing for Yedioth Ahronoth, Ma'ariv, Al HaMishmar and Davar. She has published five novels as well as a memoir of the Six-Day War called Israel Journal: June 1967 and a biography of her father called My Father, His Daughter. Derived from a Kirkus review: After the Egyptian attack on Yom Kippur, 1973, Amalia Darom rushes to a Tel Aviv hospital to volunteer to tend the wounded that start quickly piling in. And in her burn ward, there's a horribly burned soldier without identification. Meanwhile, Amalia's husband Daniel, ostensibly a reservist but actually a member of Israeli intelligence, goes off to the Sinai front, where he joins a unit about to enter Suez City--and is soon sent on a mission to find an operative whom he himself recruited years back; he can't find him in Suez, and while there he's wounded in an ambush. Back in Tel Aviv, Amalia's unknown soldier finally dies. Eventually these two strands meet: the unidentified dead soldier was "Phoenix, " Daniel's operative. Not surprisingly, Dayan has easy authority when writing both about intelligence and military operations; Amalia's psychological shock reads well. Dayan grabs and releases the catharsis of quick death, the concentrated fear and mourning and national apprehension that Israel faced in '73. This is clearly a book for overseas consumption, with lots of background explanation, but the impact is sharp and often heartbreaking.