Yona Zeldis McDonough
Toby Devens on what Jewish and Korean moms have in common, her lifelong passion for music, and the pleasures of finding love in the middle ages.
Toby Devens on what Jewish and Korean moms have in common, her lifelong passion for music, and the pleasures of finding love in the middle ages.
In “Coming Clean,” Sue Margolis tackles the age-old dilemma of who takes out the trash, who does the laundry and who mops the floors—and what it all means.
In this slim but brutal novel, Lillian Weill blames herself for the fatal accident that takes her father away. Tripping through failed love affairs and doomed friendships, all Lilly wants is shelter and peace. She retreats into a world of delusion and lands in a New York City psychiatric hospital; “Hystera” charts her journey into the darkest hell of self—and back again.
Born in Nashville, TN and raised in Virginia, Ruchama King Feuerman bought herself a one-way ticket to Jerusalem when she was seventeen to study Kabbalah with mystics.
Margot Mifflin’s recently reissued “Bodies of Subversion: A Secret History of Women and Tattoos” is a brilliant and compulsively readable volume that offers an alternative range of meanings: tattoo as a symbol of empowerment, of catharsis, or as a way of establishing new boundaries for the female body.
In her fifth novel, Two of a Kind, Lilith’s Fiction Editor Yona Zeldis McDonough tackles the still-thorny subject of intermarriage. Christina Connelly, Catholic by birth, falls in love with Dr. Andy Stern, who is Jewish. Among the many impediments to their ultimate happiness is Andy’s mother, Ida, a Holocaust survivor. Here is an excerpt.
Though Mother’s Day 2013 may be a wrap, it’s not too late to gift your maternal unit with a copy of What My Mother Gave Me: Thirty One Women On The Gifts That Mattered Most.
A medium focuses on seeing the spirits of the dead. I’m more of a “nuts and bolts” psychic. I see a client’s relationships, finances, work life, health concerns, etc. But of course, the spirits are always around. As a psychic, I see in symbols. I get mental images such as the scales of justice signifying either that the client is a lawyer or in the midst of a lawsuit. It’s like walking around with a unique tarot deck in my head.
So begins Odette’s Secret, a lyrical and haunting tale that was drawn from an actual story and reimagined by children’s book writer Maryann MacDonald.
The temple my kids grew up in is nicknamed “Temple Beth Showrunner” because the creators of so many television shows attend. But when you sit in the sanctuary year after year you see that loss is loss.