Click Here to Read: Isaac Bashevis Singer, The Art of Fiction No. 42 Interviewed by Harold Flender in the Paris Review ISSUE 44, FALL 1968.
VIDEO STILL OF ISAAC BASHEVIS SINGER, BY TETSUO KOGAWA, 1977.
Published by IPbooks:
Click Here to Purchase: “What Survives” by Phyllis M Skoy.
Click Here to Purchase: City Within a City by Basia Tempkin Berman.
Click Here to Purchase: The Unknown Freud: Five Plays and Five Essays by Robert Lippman.
Click Here to Purchase: Never Again: Echoes of the Holocaust As Understood Through Film by Sylvia Ginsparg.
Distributed by IPBooks:
Click Here to Purchase: The Jewish World of Sigmund Freud by Arnold D. Richards
Click Here to Purchase: My Mother’s Eyes by Anna Ornstein.
Click Here to Purchase: A Childhood Clouded by War by Christianne Baudry.
Click Here to Read: One in 6 American Adults Say They Have Taken Psychiatric Drugs, Report Says By Benedict Carey in The New York Times on December 12, 2016.
A survey of psychiatric drug usage found that the most commonly used type of drug was an antidepressant, followed by anti-anxiety or sleeping pills.
Credit: Philip Scott Andrews/The New York Times
Click Here to Read: Manchester by the Sea: The suffering of an ordinary man By Joanne Laurier on the World Socialist Web Site on December 10, 2016.
Click Here to Read: Manchester by the Sea by Matt Zoller Seitz on The RogerEbert.com website on November 18, 2016.
Click Here to Read: Sundance Film Review: ‘Manchester by the Sea’ by Justin Chang in Variety on January 23, 2016. Continue reading Movies Monday: Manchester by the Sea
Click Here to Read: CIA Declassifies Maps from 75 Years of Surveillance: To mark the 75th anniversary of its Cartography Center, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) shares decades of declassified maps by Allison Meier on the HyperAllertic website on December 8, 2016.
“The Leningrad Front” (1943) (via Central Intelligence Agency/Flickr)
Click Here to Read: The Mental Health Crisis in Trump’s America by Richard A. Friedman in The New York Times on December 12, 2016.
An art exhibit in Boston consists of large posters of nearly three dozen people, some ordinary, some famous, who have struggled with mental illness. CreditMichael Dwyer/Associated Press