Al pi ha-tehom: roman. In Two Volumes.
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1939. Hardbound. Octavos, blue cloth with gold lettering, spines a little worn, 259 + 272 pp. Translated into Hebrew from the original Yiddish by Y.L. Barukh. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1939. Hardbound. Octavos, blue cloth with gold lettering, spines a little worn, 259 + 272 pp. Translated into Hebrew from the original Yiddish by Y.L. Barukh. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1960. Hardbound. Quarto, creme colored cloth spine with gold lettering, blue cloth covered boards with gold lettering, tipped in frontispiece photo, 462 pp., wear to the rear pastedown endpaper. Text is in Hebrew translated from the Yiddish. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1935. Hardbound. Octavos, blue cloth with gold lettering, spine of volume two soiled,208 + 253 pp. Translated into Hebrew by Y. L. Barukh. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1928. Hardbound. Octavo, black cloth with gold lettering, 287 pp. In Hebrew. Some works translated into Hebrew by Asch, some by other hands including S.M. Shapiro. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1934. Hardbound. Octavo, blue cloth with gold lettering, 249 pp. Translated into Hebrew from the Yiddish by Y.L. Barukh. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1929. Hardbound. Octavo, blue cloth with gold lettering, fraying at the spine ends, 223 pp. Translated into Hebrew from the Yiddish by Y.L. Barukh. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1929. Hardbound. Octavo, brown cloth with gold lettering, 215 pp., yellowed paper. Hinges reinforced with archival cloth tape. Translated into Hebrew from the Yiddish by H. Yeivin. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1927. Hardbound. Octavo, black cloth with gold lettering, 114 pp., yellowed paper. Translated into Hebrew from the Yiddish by Y. H. Yeivin. More
Tel Aviv: Hotsaat Dvir, 1934. Hardbound. Octavo, blue cloth with gold lettering, 272 pp. Translated into Hebrew from the Yiddish by Y.L. Barukh. More
Warsaw: Hotsaat Yavneh, 1905. Hardbound. Small octavo, half green cloth, marbled paper covers, 48, 48 pp. Text is in Hebrew. Bound with "Sipurim. Kovets Rishon," H.D. Nomberg, Warsaw, Hotsaat Sifrut (al yad Yavneh), 1905. More