The Gypsies Never Came

The Gypsies Never Came
Author :
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Total Pages : 135
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780689831478
ISBN-13 : 0689831471
Rating : 4/5 (78 Downloads)

Synopsis The Gypsies Never Came by : Stephen Roos

Sixth-grader Augie Knapp, who has a deformed hand, is convinced by Lydie Rose, the strange new girl in town, that the gypsies are coming for him.

Gypsies Never Came

Gypsies Never Came
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages :
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0613958594
ISBN-13 : 9780613958592
Rating : 4/5 (94 Downloads)

Synopsis Gypsies Never Came by : Stephen Roos

Augie Knapp wears a glove to cover his deformed hand. No one suspects that he has a secret of his own until Lydie Rose Meisenheimer blows into town, proclaiming herself Augie's new best friend and helping him in his struggle to accept himself.

The Gypsies

The Gypsies
Author :
Publisher : Waveland Press
Total Pages : 273
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781478610632
ISBN-13 : 1478610638
Rating : 4/5 (32 Downloads)

Synopsis The Gypsies by : Jan Yoors

At the age of twelve, Jan Yoors ran away from his cultural Belgian family to join a wandering band, a kumpania, of Gypsies. For ten years, he lived as one of them, traveled with them from country to country, shared both their pleasures and their hardshipsand came to know them as no one, no outsider, ever has. Here, in this firsthand and highly personal account of an extraordinary people, Yoors tells the real story of the Gypsies fascinating customs and their never-ending struggle to survive as free nomads in a hostile world. He vividly describes the texture of their daily life: the Gypsies as lovers, spouses, parents, healers, and mourners; their loyalties and enmities; their moral and ethical beliefs and practices; their language and culture; and the history and traditions behind their fierce pride. The exultant celebrations, the daring frontier crossings, the yearly horse fairs, the convoluted business deals in which Gypsy shrewdness combined with all the apparatus of modern technology are all brought to life in this memorable portrait of the most romanticized, yet most maligned and least-known people on earth. An insiders story, The Gypsies lifts the veil of secrecy that for so long has enshrouded this race of strangers in our midst.

The Gypsies During the Second World War

The Gypsies During the Second World War
Author :
Publisher : Univ of Hertfordshire Press
Total Pages : 228
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0900458852
ISBN-13 : 9780900458859
Rating : 4/5 (52 Downloads)

Synopsis The Gypsies During the Second World War by : Donald Kenrick

King of the Gypsies

King of the Gypsies
Author :
Publisher : Milo Books Ltd
Total Pages : 358
Release :
ISBN-10 :
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 ( Downloads)

Synopsis King of the Gypsies by : Bartley Gorman with Peter Walsh

The Sky Never Came Down

The Sky Never Came Down
Author :
Publisher : Ukiyoto Publishing
Total Pages : 366
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9789390414468
ISBN-13 : 9390414466
Rating : 4/5 (68 Downloads)

Synopsis The Sky Never Came Down by : Utpal

‘One empire expands and thrives on the death ground of another; the empire of human civilization did same on the kingdom of Nature: so was the destiny of a pack of jackals of this fiction under the steamroller aggression of the human urbanization’. An allegorical fable of imaginative fantasy questioning the advance of civilization and the right of authoritarian instinct of mankind. It is also a note on ecology and disorientation of Nature by what we tag as advancement of civilization. It also throws light on all sorts of beings that were and are still being thrown away from their natural abode and made stateless on ethnic grounds and compelled to cross borders for shelter and food. The novel describes how a handful of power-loving beings, for all time, shapes the future of a place as well as its people. They change a virgin land to a concrete city, the attitudes of the people of the land, the fate of the very place in the name of bright and lucrative urbanization as the fate of the jackals of the novel is shaped and sent to the darkness of future. The whole story unfolds through the answers of a mother jackal to the curious questions of her baby jackal trapped in a walled urban factory premises and the question is ‘Does the fate do the final justice to the homeless jackals?’

The Cadence of Gypsies

The Cadence of Gypsies
Author :
Publisher : Hungry Goat Press
Total Pages : 200
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781942314165
ISBN-13 : 1942314167
Rating : 4/5 (65 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cadence of Gypsies by : Barbara Casey

Three gifted but mischievous teens set out on a journey to discover the connection between the Voynich Manuscript, one of the most mysterious documents in the world and their mentor.

History of Gypsies

History of Gypsies
Author :
Publisher : Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages : 42
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781664162785
ISBN-13 : 166416278X
Rating : 4/5 (85 Downloads)

Synopsis History of Gypsies by : Venus Sirchie

History of Gypsies is a book written to inform people of some things about the Gypsies that are true. The author is a half Gypsy that had years of research and experience with the Gypsies. The author’s mother, a full blooded Gypsy, always wanted to explain the Gypsies and how they were treated throughout their history.

Story of Government

Story of Government
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 1082
Release :
ISBN-10 : NYPL:33433069240236
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (36 Downloads)

Synopsis Story of Government by : Henry Austin

The Gypsies

The Gypsies
Author :
Publisher : Library of Alexandria
Total Pages : 263
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781465606433
ISBN-13 : 1465606432
Rating : 4/5 (33 Downloads)

Synopsis The Gypsies by : Charles Godfrey Leland

It is, I believe, seldom observed that the world is so far from having quitted the romantic or sentimental for the purely scientific that, even in science itself, whatever is best set forth owes half its charm to something delicately and distantly reflected from the forbidden land of fancy. The greatest reasoners and writers on the driest topics are still “genial,” because no man ever yet had true genius who did not feel the inspiration of poetry, or mystery, or at least of the unusual. We are not rid of the marvelous or curious, and, if we have not yet a science of curiosities, it is apparently because it lies for the present distributed about among the other sciences, just as in small museums illuminated manuscripts are to be found in happy family union with stuffed birds or minerals, and with watches and snuff-boxes, once the property of their late majesties the Georges. Until such a science is formed, the new one of ethnology may appropriately serve for it, since it of all presents most attraction to him who is politely called the general reader, but who should in truth be called the man who reads the most for mere amusement. For Ethnology deals with such delightful material as primeval kumbo-cephalic skulls, and appears to her votaries arrayed, not in silk attire, but in strange fragments of leather from ancient Irish graves, or in cloth from Lacustrine villages. She glitters with the quaint jewelry of the first Italian race, whose ghosts, if they wail over the “find,” “speak in a language man knows no more.” She charms us with etchings or scratchings of mammoths on mammoth-bone, and invites us to explore mysterious caves, to picnic among megalithic monuments, and speculate on pictured Scottish stones. In short, she engages man to investigate his ancestry, a pursuit which presents charms even to the illiterate, and asks us to find out facts concerning works of art which have interested everybody in every age. Ad interim, before the science of curiosities is segregated from that of ethnology, I may observe that one of the marvels in the latter is that, among all the subdivisions of the human race, there are only two which have been, apparently from their beginning, set apart, marked and cosmopolite, ever living among others, and yet reserved unto themselves. These are the Jew and the gypsy. From time whereof history hath naught to the contrary, the Jew was, as he himself holds in simple faith, the first man. Red Earth, Adam, was a Jew, and the old claim to be a peculiar people has been curiously confirmed by the extraordinary genius and influence of the race, and by their boundless wanderings. Go where we may, we find the Jew—has any other wandered so far? Yes, one. For wherever Jew has gone, there, too, we find the gypsy. The Jew may be more ancient, but even the authentic origin of the Romany is lost in ancient Aryan record, and, strictly speaking, his is a prehistoric caste. Among the hundred and fifty wandering tribes of India and Persia, some of them Turanian, some Aryan, and others mixed, it is of course difficult to identify the exact origin of the European gypsy. One thing we know: that from the tenth to the twelfth century, and probably much later on, India threw out from her northern half a vast multitude of very troublesome indwellers. What with Buddhist, Brahman, and Mohammedan wars,—invaders outlawing invaded,—the number of out-castes became alarmingly great. To these the Jats, who, according to Captain Burton, constituted the main stock of our gypsies, contributed perhaps half their entire nation. Excommunication among the Indian professors of transcendental benevolence meant social death and inconceivable cruelty. Now there are many historical indications that these outcasts, before leaving India, became gypsies, which was the most natural thing in a country where such classes had already existed in very great numbers from early times.