Leila Baron
“This won’t affect your ability to get pregnant or care for another child. Formula’s just fine. Your kids need you around, healthy. It’s time.”
“This won’t affect your ability to get pregnant or care for another child. Formula’s just fine. Your kids need you around, healthy. It’s time.”
I developed crushes on men who seemed “exotic,” the irony being that those characters were played by Jews.
Far from an attempt to assimilate into America by mailing our version of Christmas cards, the tradition of sending out greetings at the start of the Jewish month of Elul has very Jewish roots.
A new film offers perspective on the feminist icon— but has been denounced by her daughters.
“The building of the house became a metaphor for my journey and search for wholeness. It was the physical manifestation of finding soul, my essence, and being able to share with others.”
Daphne Kalotay talks to Lilith about “The Archivists,” loss, and what lies beneath the surface.
Shirley Russak Wachtel talks to Lilith about how grief and betrayal threaten to destroy what were once unbreakable bonds in her novel A Castle in Brooklyn.
Greta Gerwig’s Barbie takes us to the bright pink Garden of Eden to teach us a meaningful lesson.
Renée Rosen talks to Lilith about the ways in which she adhered to the facts—and the important reasons why she didn’t in her novel about the life of Estée Lauder.
How can we better care for our queer and trans elders as they age?