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Bidding Information
Lot #    24232
Auction End Date    7/7/2009 12:56:00 PM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Merhov ha-Yehudim
Title (Hebrew)    מרחוב היהודים
Author    Abraham Leib Ben-Avigdor
City    Warsaw
Publisher    Schuldberg
Publication Date    1891
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   32; [2], 33-62 pp. 16 mo. 149:108 mm., usual light age staining, stamps. A very good copy bound in the original wrappers.
          
Detailed
Description
   First two numbers of the popular series of stories by Abraham Leib Shalkovich, better known by his pen name Ben-Avigdor. Both have the subtitle Ahavah ve-Hovah. Thay are the first fruits of his "Sifrei Agorah"(Penny Books) series, begun in 1891, offering Hebrew literature in an attractive and reasonably priced booklet form. The series served as the medium of the "new wave" which sought to revitalize Hebrew literature and to introduce the realism then current in Europe. They consisted of a series of original short stories and in the following four years brought out thirty-one numbers. They included six novels and novelettes by himself, the others being by the best-known Hebrew writers of the day, such as Frischman, Perez, Taviov, and Brainin.

Abraham Leib Shalkovich, (pen name Ben-Avigdor, 1867–1921) was a Russian Hebrew author and pioneer of modern Hebrew publishing. Born in Zheludok province of Grodno, Shalkovich settled in Warsaw in 1891. In 1889 he wrote a sharp criticism of the halukkah system in Ha-Meliz (nos. 82–83), and his first story, "Elyakim ha-Meshugga" ("Eliakim the Insane"). The success of the "Agorah" books prompted Shalkovich to set up the Ahi'asaf publishing house in Warsaw (1893), and he edited the first three volumes of the Lu'ah Ahi'asaf annual (1894–96). He also contributed to Ha-Pardes, and to Ha-Zeman, published by Ezra Goldin. In 1896 he left Ahi'asaf and set up Tushiyyah, a new company which published translations from foreign languages. In 1901 Shalkovich founded a children's weekly called Olam Katan, and in 1904 renewed the publication of the daily Ha-Zeman. His work as a publisher demanded his entire energy and curtailed his own writing. In 1913 he founded the Ahisefer publishing house, which also issued the miscellany Netivot (1913) in the editing of which he had a share. In Netivot he published a long article, "Ahad Ha-Am u-Venei Moshe" (pp. 238–90), on Ahad Ha-Am whom he had previously supported and admired. Shalkovich died suddenly in Carlsbad, while attending the Twelfth Zionist Congress. Shalkovich was among the first of the modern Hebrew writers to stress the problems of the individual Jew rather than those of the Jewish people. In his story "Menahem ha-Sofer" (1893) he called for a true portrayal of the Jewish scene in a simple realistic vein. But Shalkovich did not always remain loyal to his own views. The novel Lifnei Arba Me'ot Shanah (1892) was written in a florid and sentimental style. While Shalkovich's stories have little literary merit, he deserves respect as an innovator in Hebrew literature and a pioneer in modern Hebrew publishing.

          
Reference
Description
   EJ; JE
        
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Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Russia-Poland:    Checked
  
Subject
Other:    Literature
  
Characteristic
Language:    Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica