Plus d’un million de livres, à portée de main !
Bookbot

Irène Cohen-Janca

    Irène Cohen-Janca explore les complexités de l'expérience humaine à travers ses créations littéraires. Son écriture se caractérise par une profonde perspicacité et un langage précis. S'appuyant sur de riches influences culturelles qui ont façonné sa perspective unique, ses récits invitent les lecteurs à contempler les thèmes universels de l'amour, de la perte et de la recherche d'identité.

    The Golem of Prague
    Mister Doctor
    Au moins un
    Arrête de mourir
    • Samuel voudrait seulement profiter de ses dix-sept ans, être amoureux, insouciant... Mais la vie en a décidé autrement et il doit affronter le regard de sa mère qui vacille et se perd. Comment vivre avec une mère qu'on ne reconnaît plus ?

      Arrête de mourir
    • Mister Doctor

      • 68pages
      • 3 heures de lecture
      4,2(7)Évaluer

      Forced by the Nazis to leave their orphanage, 160 Jewish children march through the streets of Warsaw. Led by their beloved director, Doctor Korczak, the children are defiantly joyful as they enter the ghetto. Two years later, the same children are rounded up to be transported to the death camp, Treblinka. Offered his freedom, Doctor Korczak refuses to abandon the children and proudly joins them to make sure that they are comforted even at the very end. This extraordinary true story introduces young readers to a remarkable man whose humanity and bravery shone through during one of history's darkest periods. Beautifully poignant drawings accompany the text, adding to the somber tone of the book. A gatefold page towards the end shows the line of children led by Doctor Korczak as they leave on their last journey.

      Mister Doctor
    • The Golem of Prague

      • 51pages
      • 2 heures de lecture

      The legend of the Golem, created by Rabbi Loew in 1500s Prague to protect persecuted Jews, is retold in this enchanting picture book through the eyes of a young boy named Frantz. Ignoring warnings, Frantz explores the synagogue attic and is transported back to the Golem's creation and demise, blending mysticism and romance.

      The Golem of Prague