Sophie Ruskay
Sophie Ruskay enjoys a family life very much like the one she creates inDiscovery at Aspen. Having raised a family of five children, she has now added twelve grandchildren, many of them teenagers who consider her their friend and compassionate advisor. She is the author ofHorsecars and Cobblestones, a warmly received novel of immigrant life in New York at the turn of the century. The same understanding which she showed in that work, she now applies to the story of a young teenager whose problems and frustrations she depicts with deep sympathy.
Mrs. Ruskay writes of the world around her with an eager eye and a responsive spirit. The grandeur of Aspen, its natural beauties, its cultural life as well as its historical heritage—all are graphically described. It is in this setting that we see the young generation of today striving for self-realization, often in rebellion against their parents during this trying period of adolescence.
Mrs. Ruskay has been a beloved figure in her community for many years, participating in the cultural, philanthropic and civic activities as a creative and energetic leader. She has written and directed a large number of plays which have been notable for their humor and social awareness. Perhaps the most significant demonstration of Mrs. Ruskay’s life-long devotion to literature and drama is seen in her formation and leadership of a literary class in the Women’s House of Detention in New York City.
Also by Sophie Ruskay:Horsecars and CobblestonesIllustrated by Cecil B. Ruskay
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
THE PERSIAN DONKEY BEADByMARGARET KRAENZELIllustrated by Peter Fellin
THE PERSIAN DONKEY BEAD
ByMARGARET KRAENZEL
Illustrated by Peter Fellin
The rich and moving story of a young Iranian boy who leaves his small farm village to search for his father, with help of an Arab girl, in the crowded squares, the apartment houses and slums, and even the great underground bazaar of Tehran.
FOR LIFE AND LIBERTYByJANET NEAVLESIllustrated by Delia Marcel
FOR LIFE AND LIBERTY
ByJANET NEAVLES
Illustrated by Delia Marcel
Nate rides his thoroughbred filly Liberty Maid on a race to save his family’s farm from Joseph Brant’s Indians in this fine historical novel set in upper New York State during the Revolutionary War.
THE SLAVE WHO SAVED THE CITY and Other Hassidic TalesByHARRY M. RABINOWICZIllustrated by Ahron Gelles
THE SLAVE WHO SAVED THE CITY and Other Hassidic Tales
ByHARRY M. RABINOWICZ
Illustrated by Ahron Gelles
The glowing, miraculous legends grown around Rabbi Israel Baal Shem-Tob, the father of Hassidism, lovingly collected and especially adapted for young readers.
DOUBLOONSByMARISTAN CHAPMANIllustrated by Carl T. Herrman
DOUBLOONS
ByMARISTAN CHAPMAN
Illustrated by Carl T. Herrman
A rousing mystery-adventure story in which four Tennessee boys are plunged by a hurricane into the Florida Everglades, are “rescued” by modern pirates and stranded in the Ten Thousand Islands, and discover pirate gold.
New York: A. S. BARNES and COMPANY, INC.London: THOMAS YOSELOFF, LTD.