Click Here to Read: Edward Hirsch, The Art of Poetry No. 110 Interviewed by Bhisham Bherwani in the Paris Reveiw ISSUE 235, WINTER 2020.
Category: Books
Bodleian Libraries announces major new benefaction to secure future of Hebrew and Jewish curatorship
Click Here to Read: Bodleian Libraries announces major new benefaction to secure future of Hebrew and Jewish curatorship: The Bodleian Libraries are pleased to announce that the future of the Libraries’ Curator of Hebraica & Judaica has been secured thanks to a generous benefaction on the Bodleian website on January 18, 2021. 
Alive and kicking
Memory’s Eyes by Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau
Click Here to Read About and Purchase: Memory’s Eyes A New York Oedipus Novel
By Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau on IPBooks.net
American Board of Psychoanalysis Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau, PhD, FABP
MEMORY’S EYES is a contemporary New York Oedipus novel. It is written for readers who enjoy playing with concepts and storylines, here namely the classical Oedipus myth, Sophocles’ three Theban plays, the psychoanalytical concept of the Oedipus complex, and its pop-cultural adaptations in cartoons and jokes. Consequently, this novel is meant to be tragic and funny, playful, but also uncomfortable. Ann, a modern Antigone, candidate in training at a psychoanalytic institute, relives and rethinks the complex story of her wide-ranging family clan. The Prologue reminds the readers of the myth’s characters and destinies, and yet they will find themselves simultaneously knowing and not knowing, anticipating and being surprised by the truth’s revelations.
“In Memory’s Eyes Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau renews the emotional richness of psychoanalysis and ancient myth. Even Continue reading Memory’s Eyes by Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau
A foodie in his element
The Undying Half-Life of Yiddish
New from IPBooks: Surrogate: How A Woman Named Sandra Made Me A Mother By Karen L. Fund

Click Here to Purchase: Surrogate: How A Woman Named Sandra Made Me A Mother By Karen L. Fund on IPBooks,net
Karen Fund’s posthumously published essay, “Surrogate: How A Woman Named Sandra Made Me A Mother,” tells the moving story about her pioneering experiences with surrogacy & adoption. Written in a warm and personal voice, she narrates her devastating experiences with infertility, frustrating encounters with insensitive doctors, raised and dashed expectations about being able to reproduce, and ultimately her anguish and perseverance in the pursuit of becoming a mother.
With courage and insight, humor and self-deprecation, Karen captures her quest for mother-hood. It will comfort and Continue reading New from IPBooks: Surrogate: How A Woman Named Sandra Made Me A Mother By Karen L. Fund



