Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukranian Stories

Due to more mature content, this book is recommended for children 14 and up.

The Kobzars were the blind minstrels of Ukraine, who memorized the epic poems and stories of 100 generations. Traveling around the country, they stopped in towns and villages along the way, where they told their tales and were welcomed by all. During the early years of Stalin's regime in the USSR, the Kobzars wove their traditional stories with contemporary warnings of soviet repression, famine, and terror. When Stalin heard of it, he called the first conference of Kobzars in Ukraine. Hundreds congregated. Then Stalin had them murdered. As the storytellers of Ukraine died, so too did their stories.

Kobzar's Children is an anthology of short historical fiction, memoirs, and poems written about the Ukrainian immigrant experience. The stories span a century of history from 1905 to 2004; and they contain the voices of people who lived through internment as "enemy aliens," homesteading, famine, displacement, concentration camps, and this new century's Orange Revolution. More than a collection, it is a social document that revives memories once deliberately forgotten.

    - Century of untold stories
    - Touches on all major points of Ukrainian history
    - Supported by the Shevchenko Foundation

The collection contains historical fiction, memoirs and poems covering 100 years of Ukrainian history, written by Ukrainian-Canadian writers from Quebec, Ontario and Western Canada. The contributors are all part of a circle of writers that Skrypuch met or mentored through an internet-based writers' group that she set up. The group's members, both established authors and novices, read and critiqued each others' works.

All royalties from the sale of this book will be donated to the Ukrainian Canadian Civil
Liberties Association.

1127406103
Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukranian Stories

Due to more mature content, this book is recommended for children 14 and up.

The Kobzars were the blind minstrels of Ukraine, who memorized the epic poems and stories of 100 generations. Traveling around the country, they stopped in towns and villages along the way, where they told their tales and were welcomed by all. During the early years of Stalin's regime in the USSR, the Kobzars wove their traditional stories with contemporary warnings of soviet repression, famine, and terror. When Stalin heard of it, he called the first conference of Kobzars in Ukraine. Hundreds congregated. Then Stalin had them murdered. As the storytellers of Ukraine died, so too did their stories.

Kobzar's Children is an anthology of short historical fiction, memoirs, and poems written about the Ukrainian immigrant experience. The stories span a century of history from 1905 to 2004; and they contain the voices of people who lived through internment as "enemy aliens," homesteading, famine, displacement, concentration camps, and this new century's Orange Revolution. More than a collection, it is a social document that revives memories once deliberately forgotten.

    - Century of untold stories
    - Touches on all major points of Ukrainian history
    - Supported by the Shevchenko Foundation

The collection contains historical fiction, memoirs and poems covering 100 years of Ukrainian history, written by Ukrainian-Canadian writers from Quebec, Ontario and Western Canada. The contributors are all part of a circle of writers that Skrypuch met or mentored through an internet-based writers' group that she set up. The group's members, both established authors and novices, read and critiqued each others' works.

All royalties from the sale of this book will be donated to the Ukrainian Canadian Civil
Liberties Association.

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Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukranian Stories

Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukranian Stories

by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch
Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukranian Stories

Kobzar's Children: A Century of Untold Ukranian Stories

by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

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Overview

Due to more mature content, this book is recommended for children 14 and up.

The Kobzars were the blind minstrels of Ukraine, who memorized the epic poems and stories of 100 generations. Traveling around the country, they stopped in towns and villages along the way, where they told their tales and were welcomed by all. During the early years of Stalin's regime in the USSR, the Kobzars wove their traditional stories with contemporary warnings of soviet repression, famine, and terror. When Stalin heard of it, he called the first conference of Kobzars in Ukraine. Hundreds congregated. Then Stalin had them murdered. As the storytellers of Ukraine died, so too did their stories.

Kobzar's Children is an anthology of short historical fiction, memoirs, and poems written about the Ukrainian immigrant experience. The stories span a century of history from 1905 to 2004; and they contain the voices of people who lived through internment as "enemy aliens," homesteading, famine, displacement, concentration camps, and this new century's Orange Revolution. More than a collection, it is a social document that revives memories once deliberately forgotten.

    - Century of untold stories
    - Touches on all major points of Ukrainian history
    - Supported by the Shevchenko Foundation

The collection contains historical fiction, memoirs and poems covering 100 years of Ukrainian history, written by Ukrainian-Canadian writers from Quebec, Ontario and Western Canada. The contributors are all part of a circle of writers that Skrypuch met or mentored through an internet-based writers' group that she set up. The group's members, both established authors and novices, read and critiqued each others' works.

All royalties from the sale of this book will be donated to the Ukrainian Canadian Civil
Liberties Association.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781550419979
Publisher: Fitzhenry & Whiteside, Limited
Publication date: 06/30/2006
Pages: 160
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 12 - 14 Years

About the Author

Marsha Skrypuch is the author of many books for children, including Silver Threads, The Best Gifts, Enough, The Hunger and Hope's War. Among the numerous writing awards won her novel about the Armenian genocide, Nobody's Child, was nominated for the Red Maple Award, the Alberta Rocky Mountain Book Award, the B.C. Stellar Award; and it was listed by Resource Links as a Best Book.

Table of Contents


Contents

Preface

A Home of Her Own by Olga Prychodko

Andriy's Break by Danny Evanishen

Tribute to My Grandmother by Kim Pawliw

It's Me, Tatia by Brenda Hasiuk

The Rings by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

Spring Harvest by Linda Mikolayenko

The Red Boots by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

Violin by Sonja Dunn

A Song for Kataryna by Linda Mikolayenko

Memories of Volodymyr Serotiuk's Birthday by Sonja Dunn

Auschwitz: Many Circles of Hell by Stefan Petelycky

Babyn Yar by Sonja Dunn

A Bar of Chocolate by Natalia Buchok

Bargain by Larry Warwaruk

Candy's Revenge by Cornelia Bilinsky

Veechnaya Pamyat by Sonja Dunn

Changing Graves by Sonja Dunn

Before Glasnost, Oy Tovarish by Sonja Dunn

Christmas Missed by Paulette MacQuarrie

The Gift by Sonja Dunn


About the Authors

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