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      • Literaturverlag Droschl GmbH

        Droschl is publishing international authors like Lydia Davis, Oksana Sabuschko, Georgi Gospodinov or Julien Gracq as well as German writing authors like Iris Hanika, Ilma Rakusa, Thomas Stangl, Monique Schwitter, Thomas Jonigk or Werner Schwab. The names speak for themselves, they stand for an attitude that does not consider literature as representation but as protest and comment from the fringe. We want to address the reader’s curiosity, those who want to discover something, who focus on words, whose one great love is language, many languages, the innumerable manners of speech.

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      • DropCap Rights Agency

        DropCap Rights Agency represents U.S.- and U.K.-based book publishers in marketing and selling the translation  rights to their titles. We are a team of passionate professionals with decades of experience in the fields of book publishing, translation rights, and publishing technology. We love introducing our publishers’ books to new markets around the world and pride ourselves in representing titles we truly believe in. We have sold book rights in over 180 different languages and in more than 120 countries.

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        The Sun Will Rise Tomorrow

        Child's View of the Holocaust

        by Irit Dror-Reytan

        The Sun Will Rise Tomorrow is not a conventional book about  the holocaust. It does not describe the atrocities of WW2, especially towards the Jewish people. Instead, the writer tells a story of her own life from a personal view as a chid, during that period. With the gentle strokes of an artist, the author paints the scenery of her childhood in Nazi-occupied Poland, from age three to six, describing events as she perceived them at the time from a child's point of view. Her peaceful and happy country life is crushed by the occupation of Nazi Germany. On a cold and rainy night, our heroine evades the firing squad that annihilates most of her family; her mother joins the partisans, her father is deported to Auschwitz, and she finds herself all alone, hidden in a wicker basket, with a Christian peasant family. After liberation and an incredible reunion with her mother, in an attempt to rehabilitate life, the child becomes the mother and is forced to mature instantly. She takes responsibility for her mother and herself in a daily struggle to survive. Then, an impossible surprise strikes! The purpose of this book is to deliver a message to children who were abused, in any way, not to give in, not to lose hope—the sun will rise tomorrow! Irit Dror-Reytan was born on September 22, 1939, in Boryslav, Poland. After the war she lived in Waldenburg, Poland, until 1950 when her family immigrated to Israel. She was educated in Tabeetha Jaffa, a Church of Scotland school. The Author completed her studies at the Israel Conservatory of Music in Tel Aviv. She received a B.A. from Queens College in New York and a Master’s degree in psychology from Lesley University in Boston. Irit taught music and English for many years. For the last twenty years, she has been treating IDF soldiers suffering from PTSD. The author has four children, seven grandchildren and lives with her husband in Israel. 128 Pages, 15X22.5 CM

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        THE INN: Twists and Turns in a Desert Oasis

        by Arye Dreyfus

        In a rocky, half-forgotten part of the Negev, an isolated inn shelters people who feel they have let themselves waste away. The battered site doesn’t offer the amenities of a structured therapeutic doctrine or the benefits of a sage’s wisdom. There are no political or religious allegiances or any public financial support—no inhibiting barriers taint Neve Dror, and every morning its visitors succeed in creating a new human mosaic. Amazingly, the inn’s unwritten motto, “You are all you have,” comes true more often than not. Men and women, young and old, international celebrities and social underdogs, agnostic Jews and devout Christians, self-made local businessmen and rich foreign heirs all rub shoulders with one another as equals in their foster desert home. Each visitor is too wise to the ways of the world to expect the scars on his or her back to quickly melt away in this strange new haven. And yet, despite the harsh surroundings, dreams breezily transform into reality and resignation becomes heresy. In this distant part of the world, at the desert inn, nothing is illusory, not even an impossible love story between a Vatican priest and an Israeli hairdresser. The inn at Neve Dror, however, is not another invented legend; this tale is a mere description of events.  Arye Dreyfus, a teacher born in France, describes dire facts, but his Israeli nature doesn’t let these facts merge into an apparently hopeless situation. He is an accomplished educator and envoy to various discreet missions, mainly in Europe and Africa. He doesn’t condemn or condone, he just eloquently unfolds a story of a decadent society that fifty years later doesn’t seem ready to come to terms with its own inconstancy. An English-language eBook Edition was published  in mid-2018. 266 pages, 14X20.5 cm.

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        DIE HERBERGE

        by Arye Dreyfus

        DIE HERBERGE: Schicksalsbegegnungen in einer Wüstenoase Arye Dreyfus In einem felsigen, halb vergessenen Teil des Negevs beherbergt eine abgelegene Herberge Menschen, die sich völlig aufgegeben haben. Der Ort hat weder eine therapeutische Struktur noch die Weisheit einer Führungspersönlichkeit zu bieten. Es gibt keine politischen oder religiösen Bindungen und keine öffentliche finanzielle Unterstützung – keine Hemmschwellen für Neve Dror, und jeden Morgen gelingt es seinen Besuchern, ein neues menschliches Mosaik zu schaffen. Erstaunlicherweise wird das ungeschriebene Motto der Herberge „Du bist alles, was du hast“ öfter wahr. Männer und Frauen, Jung und Alt, internationale Prominente und soziale Außenseiter, agnostische Juden und gläubige Christen, lokale Geschäftsleute, Startups und reiche ausländische Erben gehen in diesem Wüstenrefugium ein und aus. Jeder Besucher ist zu erfahren im Umgang mit der Welt, um zu erwarten, dass die Narben auf seinem Rücken an diesem exotischen Zufluchtsort schnell verschwinden würden. Und doch werden Träume in der rauen Umgebung immer wieder zur Realität und Resignation gilt als Häresie. In diesem abgelegenen Teil der Welt, im Desert Inn, ist nichts illusorisch, nicht einmal eine unmögliche Liebesgeschichte zwischen einem vatikanischen Priester und einem israelischen Friseur. Die Herberge in Neve Dror ist jedoch keine erfundene Legende. Diese Geschichte beruht auf tatsächlichen Gegebenheiten.  Arye Dreyfus, in Frankreich geborener Lehrer, beschreibt eine erschreckende Realität, doch sein sonnig israelisches Gemüt hat auch immer einen Blick für das Schöne. Er ist ein versierter Pädagoge und hauptsächlich in Europa und Afrika unterwegs. Er verurteilt nichts und romantisiert nichts, er erzählt nur eloquent die Geschichte einer dekadenten Gesellschaft, die fünfzig Jahre später nicht bereit zu sein scheint, sich mit ihrer eigenen Unbeständigkeit auseinanderzusetzen. Eine englischsprachige eBook Edition wurde Mitte 2018 veröffentlicht. 266 Seiten, 14 x 20,5 cm.

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      • Trusted Partner
        February 2016

        Wie man ein Kind stärken kann

        Ein Handbuch für Kita und Familie

        by Herausgegeben von Wyrobnik, Irit

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      • Trusted Partner
      • Jewish studies
        November 2015

        Esau, My Brother: Father of Edom and Rome

        Esau – Father of Edom and Rome - hero of Palestinian Talmud – the Yerushalmi - and Midrashic sources in the Tannaic and Amoraic period under Roman rule

        by Dr. Irit Aminoff

        For two thousand years, Jews educated in their people`s traditions, have perceived Jacob and Esau as depictions of good versus evil, truth versus falsehood, purity versus impurity, and so on. Any Jewish child over the age of three, could depict Esau as that wicked personage who pursued his brother Jacob and wanted to destroy him in his fiery hatred. Esau whose blessing was denied him, rose against his brother to whom it was transferred. Indeed, Esau, in the form of the nations among whom Israel`s exile dwell, lays in wait for Jacob to this day, though, due to Esau moral and ethical inferiority, he will never realize his schemes. * The Christian, however, at mention of Jacob and Esau, immediately envisions the figures of the Genesis account [portions: Toledot & Vayishlah] as they are depicted according to the Biblical narrative form of diametrical opposites. * Esau and Jacob, heroes of the biblical account, portrays two opposite sets of fundamental traits: basic simplicity and fairness against cunning, treachery and sophistication. Through a process they become in the writings of the sages, contradictory figures who scarcely resemble the Biblical heroes. * The purpose of this book is to delineate this alternative Esau figure, the one created by Aggadic literature, and to try and understand the motivations behind this weighty shift of perspective. This is the book of Esau – Father of Edom and Rome - hero of Palestinian Talmud – the Yerushalmi - and Midrashic sources in the Tannaic and Amoraic period under Roman rule.

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