Creative Nonfiction

  • Stumbling Onto YomHazikaron

    A personal essay on Stolpersteine and memorial stickers, published in the Jewish Book Council’s Witnessing Series.

  • The October 7th Haggadah

    A short piece reimagining the Passover Haggadah six months after October 7. Published in the Jewish Book Council’s Witnessing Series.

  • Two: Reflections on the Second Anniversary of October 7

    Published on Judith Magazine on October 7, 2025.

Book Reviews

  • Fiction: The Red House

    A review of the 2025 novel by Mary Morris, published in the Jewish Book Council.

  • Fiction: Displaced Persons, Stories

    A review of the 2024 award-winning collection of short stories by Joan Leegant, published in the Tel Aviv Review of Books.

  • Nonfiction: Green World, A Tragi­com­ic Mem­oir of Love & Shakespeare

    Review of the debut memoir of Michelle Ephraim, published in the Jewish Book Council.

  • Fiction: Victorious

    Review of the novel by Yishai Sarid and translated from the Hebrew by Yardenne Greenspan, published in the Tel Aviv Review of Books.

  • Nonfiction: Nearly Departed, Adventures in Loss, Cancer and Other Inconveniences

    Review of the debut memoir by Gila Pfeffer, published in the Jewish Book Council.

Special Projects

  • 06:29 by Oren Cohen

    Collaborated with photo journalist Oren Cohen and designer Hadas Kellner Golani in the translation of the bilingual edition of 06:29, which captures the days, weeks and months after the attacks of October 7, 2023. The book was published in late 2025.

“The Little Things, a War Diary”

  • Two years of dispatches from the "October 7 War"

    In the days following the attacks of October 7, 2023, I began compiling daily “reports” for friends and family members abroad. What I naively thought would be a short-lived “war diary” for worried family members became a popular Substack newsletter that, for over two years, has reached thousands of readers every month. I still update it on a regular basis.

    The diary focuses on the little things —the the daily life, the local headlines, the questions, the changing perspectives — of a series of events whose dimensions and consequences we are still struggling to grasp.