Greek things you pine to have…

As part of Greek Wonders’ efforts to make Greek culture accessible to San Francisco East Bay residents, specialty items will be made available for purchase through our website. Below you can find an indicative list of items.

What we have in mind is to bring to our community things in the categories of books, jewelry, kitchen equipment and packaged foods. If you have suggestions about particular Greek specialty items that you might be interested in, please share with us and let us know by completing the request form below. We will follow up with our local sources in Greece and explore making the item available. There is no obligation to purchase.

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C.P. CAVAFY Selected Poems, Bilingual Edition, Translated to English by David Connolly
$18.75
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Οδυσσέας Ελύτης Το Φωτόδεντρο και η δέκατη τέταρτη ομορφιά, ιν Γρεεκ
$14.82
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ELYTIS' GREECE
$13.38
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ΒΟΥΚΕΦΑΛΑΣ ΤΟ ΑΛΟΓΟ ΤΟΥ ΜΕΓΑΛΟΥ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΥ, του Φιλιππου Μανδηλαρα
$8.40
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ΘΕΣΣΑΛΟΝΙΚΗ, Πολη στο σταυροδρομι δυο κοσμων, του Φιλιππου Μανδηλαρα
$8.40
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Odysseus Elytis: Selected Poems 1940-1979 Odysseus Elytis, translated by Edmund Keeley, Philip Sherrard, George Savidis, John Stathatos Nanos Valao
$18.35
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ΒΕΡΓΙΝΑ, Περιδιαβαζοντας τον Αρχαιλογικο Χωρο, απο το Υπουργειο Πολιτισμου
$11.37
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The Monuments of Prespa, published by the Ministry of Culture, Greece
$9.37
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The Last Temptation - Softcover Kazantzakis, Nikos
$13.70
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Novel and Other Poems (Greek Edition) Greek Edition by George Seferis (Author)
$20.34
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Aesop's Fables, hardcover, by Edward J. Detmold
$0.00
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Mycenae-Epidaurus Argos-Tiryns-Nauplion; a guide to the archaelogical sites of Argolid.
$0.00
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Earings, handmade, Northern Greece
$0.00
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Silver ring with garnet, handmade, Northern Greece
$0.00
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Garlic press, wooden, 5 in tall
$0.00
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Traditional Greek coffee briki
$0.00
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Slender, 90cm-long wooden rolling pin
$0.00
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Ouzo glasses, 4 in tall
$0.00
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Feta Cheese from Dodoni, Greece
$0.00
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Handmade and homemade barley rusks, known as "dakos"
$7.00
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Trahanas, homemade
$0.00
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GW Baking Series: Let's make loukoumades!
$3.00
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The Miser and His Gold

A Miser had buried his gold in a secret place in his garden. Every day he went to the spot, dug up the treasure and counted it piece by piece to make sure it was all there. He made so many trips that a Thief, who had been observing him, guessed what it was the Miser had hidden, and one night quietly dug up the treasure and made off with it.

When the Miser discovered his loss, he was overcome with grief and despair. He groaned and cried and tore his hair.

A passerby heard his cries and asked what had happened.

“My gold! O my gold!” cried the Miser, wildly, “someone has robbed me!”

“Your gold! There in that hole? Why did you put it there? Why did you not keep it in the house where you could easily get it when you had to buy things?”

“Buy!” screamed the Miser angrily. “Why, I never touched the gold. I couldn’t think of spending any of it.”

The stranger picked up a large stone and threw it into the hole.

“If that is the case,” he said, “cover up that stone. It is worth just as much to you as the treasure you lost!”

A possession is worth no more than the use we make of it.

Fable credited to Aesop, a slave and storyteller who lived in ancient Greece between 620 and 564 BCE,