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Books with title Promised Land Lane

  • The Promised Land

    JUL, Achdé

    Paperback (Cinebook, Ltd, Dec. 29, 2017)
    When an old cowboy friend asks Luke to escort his family, freshly arrived from Poland, to their new home in the West, our lonesome hero has no idea what sort of difficulties to expect. If the Sterns are brave and resolute, they are also ignorant of American ways – and bring with them a multitude of baffling customs. And as if that wasn't enough, the extremely valuable Torah that travels with them has caught the eyes of some unsavoury characters...
    P
  • Promised Land

    Robert B. Parker

    Paperback (Berkley Pub Group, May 1, 1978)
    mystery novel
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin, Werner Sollors

    eBook (Penguin Classics, June 26, 2012)
    An extraordinary popular success when it was first published in 1912, The Promised Land is a classic account of the Jewish American immigrant experience. Mary Antin emigrated with her family from theEastern European town of Polotzk to Boston in 1894, when she was twelve years old. Preternaturally inquisitive, Antin was a provocative observer of the identity-altering contrasts between Old World andNew. Her narrative — of universal appeal and rich in its depictions of both worlds — captures a large-scale sociocultural landscape and paints a profound self-portrait of an iconoclast seeking to reconcile herheritage with her newfound identity as an American citizen.
  • Promised Land

    Brandon Dean

    Paperback (Indigo River Pub, March 19, 2020)
    You never realize what the good old days are until youÂ’re no longer living in them. In May 1943, seventeen-year-old Clint Brodsky learns this lesson the hard way when German forces invade and attack the US mainland. As ClintÂ’s hometown of Mayfield, Ohio, is left in ruins, he is forced to overcome and adapt to this macabre new world he once called home.Constantly questioning his own moral compass as he finds himself doing things he normally wouldnÂ’t even consider, Clint must conquer his deepest fears for the sake of his newborn baby sister, Violet, and the girl he learns to love, Hazel. Clint must grow and mature to keep the ones he loves safe, all the while dealing with the natural feelings and dilemmas an impressionable teenager is bound to have. This, coupled with his hopes of finding a better world, is what drives him. But what will happen when his own need for revenge and his instinct to survive drive him in the opposite direction?
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin

    Paperback (Digireads.com, Jan. 1, 2011)
    Mary Antin was born in 1881 to a Jewish family in Polotsk, in what was then czarist Russia. Had her family not immigrated to the Boston area in 1894, Mary would have grown up uneducated, married an Orthodox Jewish man, raised children and never become assimilated into society. Thanks to the American public school system, Antin became large Americanized, learning the English language and American customs. By eighteen, she had published her first autobiographical volume, which later became her masterpiece, "The Promised Land". It is revered as a coming of age story for not only a young immigrant, but for a young woman. The novel describes Antin's childhood memories of Russia and immigrating, and the emotions she felt as she let go of one identity for another. She praises the public school system and relishes the freedom she feels as an American in a work that has been called the classic Jewish-American immigrant autobiography.
  • The Promised Land

    Sekiya Miyoshi

    Hardcover (Pilgrim Pr, Sept. 1, 2001)
    Religous children's tale
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  • Promise Land

    J.E. Byrne

    language (Sabol Communications, Aug. 7, 2019)
    One year ago, a mysterious explosion ignited a fire that would eventually end life as they knew it. Join Sarah, Lance, Jack, and the other survivors as they journey through a desert of hunger, disease, war, and false promises.“Promise Land” follows Byrne’s first two volumes in the Dead Land Series: “Dead Land” and “Hollow Land.” Quickly turn the pages with the survivors, moving forward in the quest of a mysterious mountain. Along the way, discover much more than just a promise of sanctuary, as all on this journey are pressed into discovering how far they are willing to go in order to survive the end of everything.Follow Byrne’s popular Dead Land Series in its themes of sin, redemption, and restoration, with all who hunger in the belief of a Promised Land.
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin

    (Penguin Classics, Feb. 1, 1997)
    Interweaving introspection with political commentaries, biography with history, The Promised Land (1912) brings to life the transformation of an East European Jewish immigrant into an American citizen. Mary Antin recounts "the process of uprooting, transportation, replanting, acclimitization, and development that took place in my own soul," and reveals the impact of a new culture and new standards of behavior on her family. A feeling of divisions—between Russia and America, Jews and Gentiles, Yiddish and English—ever-present in her narrative, is balanced by insights, amusing and serious, into ways to overcome them. In telling the story of one person, The Promised Land illuminates the lives of hundreds of thousands. This Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics edition includes eighteen black-and-white photographs from the book's first edition and reprints for the first time Antin's essay "How I wrote The Promised Land."
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin

    Paperback (Dover Publications, Dec. 19, 2012)
    "A unique contribution to our modern literature and to our modern history." — The New York TimesThis classic of the Jewish-American immigrant experience was an instant critical and popular success upon its 1912 publication. Author Mary Antin arrived in the United States from Russia in the 1890s at the age of 12. Her memoir vividly recaptures scenes from both Old and New World cultures, chronicling the poverty and oppression of Czarist Russia as well as the excitement and challenges of her assimilation into American life at the turn of the twentieth century.Although she arrived without knowing a word of English, Antin wholeheartedly embraced her new home. "A kingdom in the slums," her Boston neighborhood afforded freedom and intellectual riches in the forms of a secular education, public library, and cultural activities at the local settlement house. This moving narrative articulates Antin's dreams as well as her stark realities, offering modern readers authentic and enduring perspectives of immigrant life.
  • Promised

    Michelle Turner

    language (, May 19, 2013)
    Linc knows Wyn is the girl for him.Wyn knows Linc is the boy for her.But she’s promised to another.Lincoln “Linc” Tatman had been at his new school for months and he thought he’d met all the girls it had to offer. Until one day, he spied Wyn sitting against a tree and realized this new place had been hiding the girl of his dreams. He goes out of his way to get to know her, even though he’s warned that it’s a hopeless case. But he’s determined to win her, even if she can only be his for a short time.Arwyn “Wyn” Scott is the black sheep of her big gypsy family. When most of the girls her age are dropping out to start their own families, she begs her parents to stay. She doesn’t fit in with the gypsy teens and the regular teens are too afraid of her five older brothers to get close. Then Linc comes into her world, showing her a new life she never thought she could have. She can’t stop herself from falling head first for the boy, even though she knows her father has promised her to a gypsy boy.Can Wyn leave behind her family and their traditions to follow her heart, or will she become a young gypsy wife?
  • The Promised Land

    Mary Antin

    eBook (, June 24, 2014)
    The Promised Land is the autobiography of Mary Antin. It tells the story of her early life in what is now Belarus and her immigration to the United States in 1894. The book focuses on her attempts to assimilate into the culture of the United States. A very personal and very interesting look into the life of a young child moving away from her homeland. Includes several black and white photos.
  • Promised Land

    Robert B. Parker

    Hardcover (Thorndike Pr, Sept. 1, 1992)
    Private investigator Spenser leaves Boston for summertime Cape Cod where he and his friend Susan Silverman find themselves involved with fools and villains whose concerns are extortion, robbery, and murder