• Published On: July 6, 2010

    The Readhead: Tregebov’s Fiction a Lesson in History By Sharon Chisvin, July 6, 2010 Among the many stories I have heard about my family ancestry, one in particular that has intrigued me is the story [...]

  • Published On: February 19, 2010

    The Knife Sharpener’s Bell: Journey Through Language and Fear by Tanya Christiansen Winter 2010 The Knife Sharpener’s Bell, Rhea Tregebov’s first novel, is a tale of multiple migrations. As the child of Russian-Jewish immigrants living [...]

  • Published On: December 12, 2009

    The Knife Sharpener’s Bell: Back in the USSR Rhea Tregebov’s tart first novel tells the story of Winnipeg Jews whose naive faith in Stalin prompts their return to Odessa B y Jim Bartley, December 12, [...]

  • Published On: September 20, 2009

    The Knife Sharpener’s Bell: Tregebov Captures Ordinary Characters under Communism By Bev Sandell Greenberg, September 20, 2009 During the Great Depression, former Winnipeg author Rhea Tregebov’s left-wing Jewish grandparents tried to leave this city to repatriate [...]

  • Published On: September 19, 2009

    The Knife Sharpener’s Bell: Review By Michael Greenstein, September 2009 Rhea Tregebov’s debut novel has been influenced by her several collections of poetry and children’s books, as well as her reading of Adele Wiseman and [...]

  • Published On: September 19, 2009

    The Knife Sharpener’s Bell: Review By Ami Sands Brodoff, September 2009 Rhea Tregebov’s debut novel opens with a man boarding a train. The setting is Winnipeg in the winter of 1935, and eight-year-old Annette Gershon [...]