Book Review, Motherless Child, by Marianne Langner Zeitlin (Zephyr Press) Motherless Child, Toronto-born author Marianne Langner Zeitlin’s third novel in as many decades, is a superbly-wrought romantic page-turner that has elements in it of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca, with more than a touch of the latter’s gothic essence. Set during…
Remembering screenwriter Robert Riskin
by
•Devil in the White City: Murder & Chicago World’s Fair, 1893
by
•In this riveting page-turner that reads like a murder mystery thriller, Erik Larson resurrects the legend of a forgotten American psychopathic mass murderer, the cold-blooded H. H. Holmes, and overlays it atop the equally dusty story of the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893, one of the most impressive achievements of gilded-age America. Satisfying the modern…
Profile: Jerry & Naomi Goldenberg
by
•Bone Button Borscht with Barbara Budd
by
•From the Canadian Jewish News, December 2004 What do you get when you put a popular shtetl folk tale into a pot and add some flavourful compositions for full orchestra, rich klezmer sounds, a pinch of Hanukkah seasoning and live narration by Barbara Budd, the Toronto-based actor and co-host of the immensely popular CBC radio…
The Man Who Would Be Messiah (1999)
by
•From the Globe and Mail, 1999 ◊ I wrote this article for the Globe’s Ideas & Beliefs column in 1999, a mere six years after Rabbi Schneerson’s death, when the Lubavitch world seemed to be pulling apart over the issue of his messianic status and who would be his successor. Don’t know what’s happened…
Sephardic roots preserved in records of Spanish Inquisition
by
•Genie Milgrom, the author of My 15 Grandmothers, was one of numerous captivating speakers at the five-day International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in Boston in August 2013. Although she was born into a Roman Catholic family of Spanish origin in Havana, Cuba, Milgrom felt an affinity for Judaism from a young age. She was five…
“KENNEDY SHOT” — First news hits Toronto (1963)
by
•Here is the front page of the Toronto Star, as delivered to my home in north Toronto on Friday November 22, 1963, with the first news of the Kennedy assassination. The editors had just enough time to strip the page of its earlier content and replace it with the huge headline plus a few sentences…
“David Levinsky:” Cahan’s classic novel of Jewish immigration
by
•Literary critics often express hallowed praise for writers who have contributed brilliant works to English literature but whose first language was not English. Two supreme examples come to mind. Polish-born Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) did not learn English until he was in his twenties, yet he became one of the language’s great novelists and story tellers…
A Remembrance on Remembrance Day
by
•My father rarely spoke about his war experiences, so when he did so one evening in December 1987, I recorded the conversation as best I could remember it in my journal. At a restaurant for dinner, my father reminisced about the old days: but what else do people reminisce about? Britain declared war against Germany…