Yona Zeldis McDonough
The so called outside world has invaded deeply and permanently the inside world, even for some of the most privileged.
The so called outside world has invaded deeply and permanently the inside world, even for some of the most privileged.
Debut author Gabriella Saab talks about the power that chess exerts in her character’s life—and her own.
The Polish nurse who rescued Jewish children is fictionalized in Kelly Rimmer’s The Warsaw Orphan.
Julie Metz talks to Fiction Editor Yona Zeldis McDonough her new book Eve and Eva: A Search for My Mother’s Lost Childhood and What War Left Behind (Atria).
An interview with Sherry Turkle about her new memoir The Empathy Diaries.
The Wolf and the Woodsman is a book about identity crisis, on both a micro and macro scale.
Author Haviva Ner-David talks to Fiction Editor Yona Zeldis McDonough about how she views this age-old conflict and her passionate commitment to ending it.
“As children, all four of us attended a private day school modeled on the English public school, where we wore uniforms, danced around the Maypole, recited the Lord’s Prayer, and belted out the greatest hits of the Anglo-Saxon playbook…”
“Please do not constrict autistic people. We can only grow as much as the environment around us.”