Mirra Ginsburg

Mirra Ginsburg (June 10, 1909 - December 26, 2000) was a 20th-century Jewish Russian-American translator of Russian literature, collector of folk tales and children's writer. Born in Bobruysk, Belarus, she moved with her family to Latvia and Canada before they settled in the United States.[1]

Bibliography

  • Kitten from One to Ten (1980) (Illustrated by Giulio Maestro)
  • The Sun's Asleep Behind the Hill (1982) (Illustrated by Paul O. Zelinsky)
  • Asleep, Asleep (1992) (Illustrated by Nancy Tafuri)
  • Merry-Go-Round: Four Stories (1992) (Illustrated by Jose Aruego and Ariane Dewey)
  • The King Who Tried to Fry an Egg on His Head (1994) (Illustrated by Will Hillenbrand)
gollark: You can fix climate change by deploying self-replicating nanomachines to dissemble atmospheric carbon dioxide into solid carbon and oxygen.
gollark: Birds are NOT real.
gollark: There are entirely too many weird interacting trends going on right now which make it hard to predict much, not that that was ever very easy.
gollark: The best estimate I'm aware of is that humanity has a 1/6 chance of ceasing to exist within a century, although this says nothing about societal collapse which doesn't wipe out everyone.
gollark: Anyway, if humanity utterly implodes by 2040, it probably won't *just* be climate change.

References

  1. Rita Berman Frischer, Mirra Ginsburg 1909-2000, Jewish Women's Archive Encyclopedia


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.