49–60 termék, összesen 175 db
Három kívánság – The Three Wishes (Nagyanyáink meséskönyve – Granny’s Storybooks)
$ 19.90Három kívánság – The Three Wishes
Ludas Matyi – Matthew the Gooseboy
Helping Verbs of the Heart
$ 25.00Esterházy achieved in this book a real literarian tour-de-force which mixes most unexpected and revealing ingredients. Two brothers and a sister, summoned by their father and reunited at the hospital where their mother lies on her deathbed, must come to grips with their relationships with both their parents
How to be an Alien
$ 19.90funny novel
George Mikes was a Hungarian-born British journalist, humorist and writer, best known for his humorous commentaries on various countries.
Hungarian Anthology – A Collection of Poems
$ 39.00enlarged and revised publication
83 Hungarian poests – 300 poems translated to English by Joseph Grosz and W. Arthur Boggs
Hungarian folk tales/Ungarische volkmarchen
$ 15.00Long ago, when Hungarians used to tell each other tales in the evenings, they thought up some of the most amazing things.
Hungarian Folk-Tales
$ 29.99Long ago, when Hungarians used to tell each other tales in the evenings, they thought up some of the most amazing things. In this edition, Hungarian-born Val Biro retells and illustrates a favorite selection of his country’s stories. Among them a lazy king, thieving goblins, an enchanted princess, dragons, a foolish wolf, and a stubborn rabbit..
In the Name of the Working Class – The Inside Story of the Revolution
$ 32.00In 1956, at the time of the Hungarian Revolution, Kopacsi was police chief in Budapest. He had fought in the anti-Nazi Resistance and welcomed the Soviet Army. Purges in the police forces during the early 1950s eventually led him to question Soviet motives. He and seven other leaders were tried and sentenced to long prison terms. This fascinating insider’s account adds a new dimension to Hungary’s history.
In the Name of the Working Class – The Inside Story of the Revolution
$ 29.90In 1956, at the time of the Hungarian Revolution, Kopacsi was police chief in Budapest. He had fought in the anti-Nazi Resistance and welcomed the Soviet Army. Purges in the police forces during the early 1950s eventually led him to question Soviet motives. He and seven other leaders were tried and sentenced to long prison terms. This fascinating insider’s account adds a new dimension to Hungary’s history.