Subasta 47 Banknote and coin stamps and Judaica items.
5.9.21
50 Dizengoff Street, Tel Aviv (Dizengoff Center, 3rd floor, 4 gates)., Israel

Items in this sale are Israeli stamps from 1948 until today, including envelopes and postcards, and various documents from Eretz Israel and the world.

Including coins and banknotes during the British Mandate and Israel. Means of payment (tokens, tickets, and more) including Templars from all over the world.

La subasta ha concluído

LOTE 171:

Eighteenth Year (Issue 156-159) Postcard 8-11
Childhood writings of Amos Oz
Until ...


Precio inicial:
$ 50
Precio estimado :
$70 - $200
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Eighteenth Year (Issue 156-159) Postcard 8-11
Childhood writings of Amos Oz
Until recently, it was common to think that Amos Oz's first printed list (2018-1939) was in our Haaretz youth newspaper, when he was a thirteen-and-a-half-year-old boy (March 4, 1953). This is what Professor Avner Holtzman wrote in a post published in this blog about six months ago ('Roof, Grandma and Wound: On Some Unfamiliar Works by Amos Oz', Oneg Shabbat Blog, May 10, 2019).
And here it turns out that this is not the case and the debut of Oz's writing must be preceded by four years. It is only understandable that these lists were not marked in the bibliography of Oz writings prepared by Yosef Yerushalmi (Am Oved, 1984).
Dr. Dror Greenblum recently presented three short and unfamiliar lists authored by the boy Amos Klausner. These lists were printed in a monthly called Our Friend, edited and printed by students at the Tachkemoni Jerusalem school where Amos studied ('Who knows? Maybe his mother left him alone: Articles by Amos Oz [Klausner] in "Our Friend", in the Tachkemoni School Magazine (Haaretz, Culture and Literature, August 16, 2019).
Greenblum noted that 'it is certainly possible that there is more'. And indeed there is more ...
These are not great works but immature lists of a teenager, but fans of the adult Oz, scholars of his work and lovers of his heritage will surely find them valuable and interesting.
Here, then, is the first pen of whoever would later become the great writer Amos Oz. First the three lists mentioned by Dror Greenblum, with the addition of the original photographs (which were not included in the previous publication), followed by three other works that were not mentioned at all in his article.