Jacob Dinezon: Chapter four, Dray literarishe doyres: zikhroynes vegn Yidishe shriftshteler - Three Literary Generations: recollections of Yiddish authors (S. L. Tsitron), [2]
“Jacob Dinezon’s Letters” with commentary by S. Niger, Di Tsukunft (The Future), trans. Jane Peppler (NY: 1929), p. 620-621, [6]
Leksikon fun der nayer Yidisher literatur (Lexicon for the New Yiddish Literature), Samuel Niger and Jacob Shatzky, editors, (NY: Congress for Jewish Culture, 1956-1981.), pp. 514-516, [13]
Der Fraynd, Historical Jewish Press (Avraham Novershtern), [16]
yiddishkayt.org
Yiddishkayt, Dedication of the Peretz Shrine, [14]
yivoarchives.org
Guide to the Sutzkever Kaczerginski Collection, Part II: Collection of Literary and Historical Manuscripts RG 223.2, YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, [12]
yivoencyclopedia.org
Dinezon, Yankev, The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe (Jeremy Dauber), [3]
Romm Family, The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe (Zeev Gries, transl. Jeffrey Green), [4]
Dik, Ayzik Meyer, The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe (Joseph Sherman), [5]
Spektor, Mordkhe, The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe (Nathan Cohen), [7]
Frug, Shimen Shmuel, The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe (Brian Horowitz), [8]