Skip to content

GROSSMAN, David. [Sally Soames].

The Smile of the Lamb.

London: Jonathan Cape , 1991.

$400.00
In Stock Item Number: RRB-152263
+$500
Add to Cart
First Edition of The Smile of the Lamb; Inscribed by David Grossman to Photographer Sally Soames
First edition in English of David Grossman's debut novel The Smile of the Lamb. Octavo, original publisher's cloth. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author to Sally Soames on the half-title page with two lines in Hebrew, "To Sally, for your friendship and your eyes - David Grossman 9/5/91 Mevasseret Zion." The recipient, British photojournalist Sally Soames, worked for The Sunday Times from 1968 until 2000 and was highly regarded for her exclusively black and white portraits of many of the most prominent figures of the 20th century including Menachem Begin, Margaret Atwood, Margaret Thatcher, Sean Connery, Rudolf Nureyev, Alec Guinness and Andy Warhol. Soames, who was known to be a warm and personal journalist, performed extensive research on her subjects and developed intimate rapports with them during her process, resulting in striking and revealing portraits. In addition to the several world leaders Soames came to know and photograph, she captured the unique personalities of some of the world’s most gifted authors, poets, and playwrights. She published two books of photographs during her lifetime: Manpower (1987) with text by Robin Morgan and an introduction by Harold Evans and Writers (1995) with a preface by Norman Mailer.  Near fine in a near fine dust jacket with toning. Translated from the Hebrew by Betsy Rosenberg.
The Smile of the Lamb was David Grossman's debut novel, first published in Hebrew in 1983 as Hiyukh ha-gedi and widely regarded as the first major Israeli novel to take the occupation of the West Bank as its subject. Set in the occupied territories, it interweaves the voices of an Israeli military administrator, his wife, an idealistic young soldier, and an old Arab storyteller named Khilmi in a tragic tale of friendship, illusion, and the human cost of military rule. Grossman (born 1954) is one of Israel's most acclaimed and internationally honored writers and a leading literary voice for peace, the author of the landmark nonfiction work The Yellow Wind and the novels See Under: Love and To the End of the Land, and the winner of the 2017 Man Booker International Prize for A Horse Walks into a Bar. This translation by Betsy Rosenberg marked the book's first appearance in English.
$400.00
In Stock
Add to Cart

Other Books by this Author

The Smile of the Lamb.

The Smile of the Lamb.

$400.00
Malcare WordPress Security