Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. George Houston (illustrator).
Publication Date: 1960
Seller: Smith Family Bookstore Downtown, Eugene, OR, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. Self published by the author, printed in Paterson, New Jersey as stated. Clean, no writing or marks. Binding tight, square, Appears unopened. Covers lightly rubbed, slightly worn, darkened with age. Image and printed information on spine and front still very sharp. Outer edges clean, toned. Pages also darkened with age.
Published by Self-published, 1957
Seller: Globus Books Tamizdat, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. In wrappers. 211 pp. A book by the Cossack writer in emigration, popular in the mid-20th century, Fyodor Ivanovich Kubansky (pseudonym, real name Gorb; 19081988). Together with his dispossessed family, he was deported to the Sverdlovsk region, from where he returned home two years later. During the years of the Great Terror, he was arrested and sentenced to three years in a camp, from where he was mobilized to the front in 1942. After a month of hostilities, he found himself in fascist captivity, but since he belonged to the Cossack class, he was soon released. He began writing and publishing while in captivity. Kubansky immigrated to the United States in 1949 and became a priest of the American Orthodox Church. Published in emigrant newspapers and magazines "New Russian Word", "Russia", "Cossack" (New York), "New Dawn" (San Francisco), "Our Country", "Sower" (Buenos Aires) and other publications . He wrote about Soviet pre-war and military reality, the famine of 1933, camps and repressions. He is the author of the works `In the mountains of Dagestan`, `On the free steppes of the Kuban`, `Black Hurricane`, `For memory`, `Let's not forget! We will not forgive!`, `Eagles of the native land`, `Free steppes drenched in blood`. This collection included three: "In the Mountains of Dagestan", "Black Hurricane" and "The Third Day".
Published by Author, Paterson, New Jersey, 1960
Seller: J.C. Bell, Lunenburg, NS, Canada
First Edition
Trade Paperback. Condition: Very Good -. First Edition. 62 pp, illus; minor soiling, ex-private-library copy with some minor markings & stamps. [09].
Published by Author's publ, Patterson, NJ, 1960
Seller: RARE PAPER INC, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Original publisher's wrappers. Book measures: 21.5 x 14 cm. 349 pages: illustrations, portraits. Text in Russian. A clean copy with mild wear and a stain on the front wrappers. Fedor Kubansky - Kuban Cossack, priest. In 1938, he was repressed and imprisoned in camps for three years. In 1942, he was mobilized and sent to the front, where he was captured. He avoided repatriation to the Soviet Union, and from 1949, he lived in the USA. In 1963, he was ordained a priest (Orthodox Church in America). Served as rector in Jackson, New Jersey. Author of numerous publications and books about the Russian Cossacks.
Published by Author's publ, Patterson, NJ, 1955
Seller: RARE PAPER INC, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Original publisher's wrappers. First Edition. Book measures: 21.5 x 14 cm. 441 pages: portrait. Text in Russian. A gently worn and soiled copy with a minor fold along the front wrapper; light foxing throughout the book. This novel is the first part of a trilogy based on the fate of Kuban' Cossacks in the first two decades of the 20th century and deals with the period leading up to the First World War. Fedor Kubansky - Kuban Cossack, priest. In 1938, he was repressed and imprisoned in camps for three years. In 1942, he was mobilized and sent to the front, where he was captured. He avoided repatriation to the Soviet Union, and from 1949, he lived in the USA. In 1963, he was ordained a priest (Orthodox Church in America). Served as rector in Jackson, New Jersey. Author of numerous publications and books about the Russian Cossacks.
Publication Date: 1955
Seller: Globus Books Tamizdat, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. In wrappers. 442 pp., port. Fyodor Kubansky (Gorb-Kubansky) is a famous Cossack emigrant writer, a native of a dispossessed family who survived camps and German captivity. Since 1949 he lived in the USA. The book is the first part of the trilogy: On the free steppes of the Kuban , Eagles of the native land , Free steppes drenched in blood . The text tells about the decade before the outbreak of the First World War, the action of subsequent parts develops during the First World War and the Civil War.
Published by Paterson, NJ, 1962
Seller: RARE PAPER INC, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Publisher's wrappers. Book measures: 21 x 13.5 cm. 288 pages: illustrations. Text in Russian. Fyodor Ivanovich Gorb was a Cossack of the Kuban army who wrote about Soviet pre-war reality, the famine of 1933, camps, and repressions. His biographical prose delved into the life of the Kuban Cossacks, their customs, and the nature of Kuban, while highlighting the tragic fate of the Cossacks after 1917.