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Books by Zelda Leah Gatuskin
New! Limited Studio Z Edition, numbered and signed. (2003, Studio Z / Amador Publishers) 92 pp. 11"x8.5" Illustrated in b/w and color. $30.00 ![]() A playful, thought-provoking, sometimes maddening and always surprising exploration of perception and consciousness, mind and body, the individual and society -- in poetry, prose and art.
(1994, Amador Publishers) 176 pp. --$12.00 ![]() A collection of dream journal entries, poems, essays, short stories, and a drama; based on the author's investigations into, and her feelings about her family history and cultural identity. She explores the themes of Jewish spirituality, shtetl life in Europe, immigration to the USA, men's and women's traditional roles. Repeated references to spirits convey the sense that this inquiry is not only guided but demanded by ancestral souls. The book is illustrated with nine original collages by the author.
(2001, Amador Publishers) 395 pp.-- $22.00 ![]() Two teens from the twenty-second century discover and reactivate an ancient spell. Time stops. Earth's fate hangs in the balance. Adventure, romance, magic and mystery -- times two!
(1991, Amador Publishers) 245 pp. $10.00 ![]() A romantic tale of time travel, mistaken identities and parallel worlds. Can one really navigate the sea of time? When George Drumm falls in love with the Gypsy Esmarelda, he must learn the secrets of the Spiral Map of Time, or lose her to the future. But the Gypsy is on her own quest. The two leapfrog across the spiral in search of lost cats, missing satchels and each other, and in the process share glimpses of their magical universe with residents of the dusty town of Caliente.
For Children of All Ages drawings and text by Zelda Leah Gatuskin (1996, Amador Publishers) 22 pp.--$5.00 ![]() This is not mindless, stay-inside-the-lines, oppressively detailed coloring. This is a visually stimulating, non-intimidating invitation to fantasize upon Gatuskin's thought-provoking ideas and questions, while the unusual drawings give you the freedom to wield your colors with abandon. --Claiborne O'Conner, Art Director, Amador Publishers
An Anthology edited by Zelda Leah Gatuskin, Michelle Miller and Harry Willson (1995, Amador Publishers) 336 pp.--$15.00 ![]() Short stories, poetry, and essays explore the down side of the holiday season. Some whimsical, some bitter, some using humor and satire -- all taking a clear honest look at traditions, memories, dysfunctional family life, cultural alienation, and the commercialization of the mythology of Christmas.
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