Looking at the History of Jewish Women in Comics
Though the influence of Jewish men on comics has been widely explored, Jewish women’s impact has not.
Though the influence of Jewish men on comics has been widely explored, Jewish women’s impact has not.
In Jennifer Cohen’s latest book, “Bigger, Better, Bolder: Live the Life You Want, Not the Life You Get,” you can replace every incidence of the word “bold” with “chutzpah.”
“The Jewish Dog,” a novel by Asher Kravitz and translated from Hebrew by Michal Kessler, does not disappoint.
Throughout his book, Smith shares moments from his pioneering career in nonfiction television.
“Shadows We Carry” is a sequel to the 2020 novel “The Takeaway Men.”
Inspired by noir classics such as “The Maltese Falcon” and “Chinatown,” Weiss subverts the hardboiled mystery genre with his own outlandish twist
“Honor” is the most recent novel by best-selling author Thrity Umrigar.
She was a close advisor not only to FDR, but to his successors Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, and Lyndon Johnson.
Each can be read as a stand-alone account, but taken together they provide a rich glimpse of Zionism and the complicated and miraculous birth of Israel.
What happens when the values of your community are not in line with your own?