In my conversation with Maria Shriver’s Sunday Paper, we explored how understanding history can help us find empathy in today’s world. The interviewer quoted me as saying, “Especially with young people, with students, I don’t want the Holocaust to be ancient history. I want it to feel relevant… So now’s the time to be bringing the stories back to life and in a way that feels relatable and relevant and modern.” Full story here.
9 Down, 1 to Go: Highlights from the Book Tour
An Author Panel, a Trade Review, and Sentiments from Israel
We Were the Lucky Ones Picks Up Momentum, at Home and Abroad
Retracing the Kurc Family Odyssey, Part II: Italy
Take Three: a Revision, a Shoot, and a Reading
Tracing the Family’s Footsteps: a 1,100-Kilometer Quest
Digging My Way to the Finish Line
"The Night Eight KGB Agents Burst Into My Flat"
Underground in Miami
Would You Entrust Your Child to a Stranger if it Meant You Could Save Her Life?