Dorit Orgad (
Hebrew: דורית אורגד) (born October 5, 1936) is an Israeli writer. She writes
children's and
young adult fiction, as well as books for adults. She also taught at acadremic institutions[1][2][3]
Orgad published 3 books for adults and 70 children's and young adult books.[1]
1979, 1993: Testing Time (בשעת מבחן) (for ages 12–16)
A
mistaken identity story: Hamid, a medical student at
Tel Aviv University, an Arab, rents a room from an old lady Miriam Rosen, who insists on calling him Haim. It turns out that she takes him for her son. Miriam's daughters accuse him of deception...
1984 (original Hebrew: הנער מסיביליה), 2006 (English): The Boy from Seville (translated by Sondra Silverston, for ages 10–13)[5]
Set in the early 17th century Spain, it is a novel about 12-year-old boy Manuel Nunez and his
Sephardic Jewish family of Marranos, Jews who were converted to Christianity, but continued to practice Judaism and for what they were persecuted by the
Inquisition in Spain and Portugal.
The book was also translated into Russian, German, Spanish, French, Italian, and Serbian[1]
The story of a 14-year-old boy from a family who came to
Petah Tikva from
Ethiopia The boy manages to deal with his life despite the racism he meets due to his black skin. For the unflattering portrayal of the Israeli society the novel was met with both criticism and praise.
2017: השתיקה של יורי (Yuri Breaks His Silence, for ages 10–17)[8]
A 12-year-old boy Ilyusha (Ilish) while living in Moscow meets a strange silent boy Yuri. When Yuri is injured by a fall from a tree, Ilish's grandmother takes case of Yuri, and Ilish and Yuri become friends, but Yuri remains silent. After Ilish and family move to Israel, Ilish meets a boy named Uri who looks remarkably similar to Yuri...
^
abDeanna Silverman, "Practicing Judaism secretly during the Spanish Inquisition",
Ottawa Jewsih Bulletin February 18, 2008, p. 31, The Boy from Seville book review (retrieved February 28, 2024)
Dorit Orgad (
Hebrew: דורית אורגד) (born October 5, 1936) is an Israeli writer. She writes
children's and
young adult fiction, as well as books for adults. She also taught at acadremic institutions[1][2][3]
Orgad published 3 books for adults and 70 children's and young adult books.[1]
1979, 1993: Testing Time (בשעת מבחן) (for ages 12–16)
A
mistaken identity story: Hamid, a medical student at
Tel Aviv University, an Arab, rents a room from an old lady Miriam Rosen, who insists on calling him Haim. It turns out that she takes him for her son. Miriam's daughters accuse him of deception...
1984 (original Hebrew: הנער מסיביליה), 2006 (English): The Boy from Seville (translated by Sondra Silverston, for ages 10–13)[5]
Set in the early 17th century Spain, it is a novel about 12-year-old boy Manuel Nunez and his
Sephardic Jewish family of Marranos, Jews who were converted to Christianity, but continued to practice Judaism and for what they were persecuted by the
Inquisition in Spain and Portugal.
The book was also translated into Russian, German, Spanish, French, Italian, and Serbian[1]
The story of a 14-year-old boy from a family who came to
Petah Tikva from
Ethiopia The boy manages to deal with his life despite the racism he meets due to his black skin. For the unflattering portrayal of the Israeli society the novel was met with both criticism and praise.
2017: השתיקה של יורי (Yuri Breaks His Silence, for ages 10–17)[8]
A 12-year-old boy Ilyusha (Ilish) while living in Moscow meets a strange silent boy Yuri. When Yuri is injured by a fall from a tree, Ilish's grandmother takes case of Yuri, and Ilish and Yuri become friends, but Yuri remains silent. After Ilish and family move to Israel, Ilish meets a boy named Uri who looks remarkably similar to Yuri...
^
abDeanna Silverman, "Practicing Judaism secretly during the Spanish Inquisition",
Ottawa Jewsih Bulletin February 18, 2008, p. 31, The Boy from Seville book review (retrieved February 28, 2024)