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Books with author Harve Zemach

  • A Penny a Look: An Old Story

    Harve Zemach, Margot Zemach

    Hardcover (Farrar Straus & Giroux, March 1, 1982)
    Two brothers set out to capture a one-eyed man to display in the marketplace.
    I
  • The Judge: An Untrue Tale

    Harve Zemach, Margot Zemach

    Paperback (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), April 1, 1988)
    A horrible thing is coming this wayCreeping closer day by day--Its eyes are scary,Its tail is hairy...I tell you, Judge, we all better pray!Anxious prisoner after anxious prisoner echoes and embellishes this cry, but always in vain. The fiery old Judge, impatient with such foolish nonsense, calls them scoundrels, ninnyhammers, and throws them all in jail. But in the end, Justice is done--and the Judge is gone. Head first! Harve Zemach's cumulative verse tale is so infectious that children won't be able to avoid memorizing it. And Margot Zemach's hilarious pictures are brimming with vitality as well as color.
    K
  • Too Much Nose: An Italian tale

    Harve Zemach

    Hardcover (Holt, Rinehart and Winston, )
    4to. Honor book at the NY Tribune Book Festival in 1967.
  • Nail soup,: A Swedish folk tale

    Harve Zemach

    Hardcover (Follett Pub. Co, Jan. 1, 1964)
    A story that teaches "we should help each other" with a positive light at the end of the story.
  • The Judge

    Harve Zemach

    Paperback (Trumpet, March 15, 1997)
    Book by Harve Zemach
  • Salt;: A Russian tale,

    Harve Zemach

    Hardcover (Follett Pub. Co, March 15, 1965)
    None
  • Duffy and the Devil

    Harve Zemach, Margot Zemach

    Paperback (Square Fish, Dec. 1, 1986)
    Duffy and the Devil was a popular play in Cornwall in the nineteenth century, performed at the Christmas season by groups of young people who went from house to house. The Zemachs have interpreted the folk tale which the play dramatized, recognizable as a version of the widespread Rumpelstiltskin story. Its main themes are familiar, but the character and details of this picture book are entirely Cornish, as robust and distinctive as the higgledy-piggledy, cliff-hanging villages that dot England's southwestern coast from Penzance to Land's End.The language spoken by the Christmas players was a rich mixture of local English dialect and Old Cornish (similar to Welsh and Gaelic), and something of this flavor is preserved in Harve Zemach's retelling. Margot Zemach's pen-and-wash illustrations combine a refined sense of comedy with telling observation of character, felicitous drawing with decorative richness, to a degree that surpasses her own past accomplishments.Duffy and the Devil is a 1973 New York Times Book Review Notable Children's Book of the Year and Outstanding Book of the Year, a 1974 National Book Award Finalist for Children's Books, and the winner of the 1974 Caldecott Medal.
    O
  • Duffy and the Devil

    Harve Zemach

    Paperback (Square Fish, March 15, 1657)
    None
  • Duffy and the Devil

    Harve Zemach, Margot Zemach

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), Jan. 1, 1973)
    Duffy and the Devil was a popular play in Cornwall in the nineteenth century, performed at the Christmas season by groups of young people who went from house to house. The Zemachs have interpreted the folk tale which the play dramatized, recognizable as a version of the widespread Rumpelstiltskin story. Its main themes are familiar, but the character and details of this picture book are entirely Cornish, as robust and distinctive as the higgledy-piggledy, cliff-hanging villages that dot England's southwestern coast from Penzance to Land's End.The language spoken by the Christmas players was a rich mixture of local English dialect and Old Cornish (similar to Welsh and Gaelic), and something of this flavor is preserved in Harve Zemach's retelling. Margot Zemach's pen-and-wash illustrations combine a refined sense of comedy with telling observation of character, felicitous drawing with decorative richness, to a degree that surpasses her own past accomplishments. Duffy and the Devil is a 1973 New York Times Book Review Notable Children's Book of the Year and Outstanding Book of the Year, a 1974 National Book Award Finalist for Children's Books, and the winner of the 1974 Caldecott Medal.
    O
  • The Judge: An Untrue Tale

    Harve Zemach, Margot Zemach

    Hardcover (Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR), Jan. 1, 1969)
    "One after another, five prisoners before the bench beg to be released on the grounds that they did not know they were breaking the law, they only reported what they saw...Told in wonderfully humorous illustrations and verse, with an ending that is a perfect climax to the suspenseful buildup."-Starred, Booklist A horrible thing is coming this way Creeping closer day by day-- Its eyes are scary, Its tail is hairy... I tell you, Judge, we all better pray!Anxious prisoner after anxious prisoner echoes and embellishes this cry, but always in vain. The fiery old Judge, impatient with such foolish nonsense, calls them scoundrels, ninnyhammers, and throws them all in jail. But in the end, Justice is done--and the Judge is gone. Head first! Harve Zemach's cumulative verse tale is so infectious that children won't be able to avoid memorizing it. And Margot Zemach's hilarious pictures are brimming with vitality as well as color.
    K
  • Mommy, Buy Me a China Doll

    Harve Zemach, Margot Zemach

    Hardcover (Farrar Straus & Giroux, March 15, 1975)
    Young Eliza Lou considers some unusual sleeping arrangements after suggesting that her mother buy her a china doll by trading her father's feather bed
    K
  • Nail Soup

    Harve Zemach

    Library Binding (Follett Pub Co, June 1, 1964)
    None