Click Here to Read: Rage and Creativity: How Feminism Sparked Psychoanalysis Summary by Lucille Spira in the APsaA Newsletter
Click Here to Purchase: Rage and Creativity: How Feminism Sparked Psychoanalysis edited by Lucille Spira. from IPBooks.

Click Here to Read: On Breathing: From first moments to last rites, the air around us is not only essential to life but also carries our speech. So being silenced can feel like death by Jamieson Webster in The New York Review of Books on April 2, 2021.|
Image: Detail from Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres: Francis I Receives the Last Breaths of Leonardo da Vinci. Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Mother May I? A Post-Floydian Folly and In the Floyd Archives: A Psycho-Bestiary by Sarah Boxer are both reviewed in the October 2020 issue of The Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association.
Click Here to Purchase;: Mother May I? A Post-Floydian Folly by Sarah Boxer
Click Here to Purchase: In the Floyd Archives: A Psycho-Bestiary by Sarah Boxer


Click Here to Read: André Aciman’s Quiet Bliss: A brilliant and charming new collection of essays, ‘Homo Irrealis,’ starts in Egypt, travels to Rome, and ends on the other side of an Eric Rohmer film, by way of Billy Wilder, Fernando Pessoa, and W.G. Sebald
by David Mikics on the Tablet Website on March 4, 2021.

Click Here to Read: A Translator’s Masterpiece: Hillel Halkin’s lifetime of thinking about language, Zionism, and writing pays rich dividends in his ‘indispensable’ new collection of essays devoted to the writers who created modern Hebrew literature out of nothing
by Adam Krisch on the Tablet website on March 04, 2021.
