Tom Teicholz
Articles
If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Auschwitz: On Jerry Stahl’s “Nein, Nein, Nein! One Man’s Tale of Depression, Psychic Torment, and a Bus Tour of the Holocaust”
Tom Teicholz reviews Jerry Stahl’s new memoir “Nein, Nein, Nein! One Man’s Tale of Depression, Psychic Torment, and a Bus Tour of the Holocaust.”
Who Killed Orchestral Music?
Tom Teicholz turns his ear to “The War on Music: Reclaiming the 20th Century” by John Mauceri.
A Day at the Beach: On Jon Bradshaw’s “The Ocean Is Closed”
A collection of journalistic pieces from the Pleistocene Era when print magazines ruled the earth.
Adventures Among the Orthodox
Two new books explore the richness and strangeness of life among Orthodox Jews.
The Day Begins with “Evening”: A Conversation with Nessa Rapoport
Nessa Rapoport discusses her second novel, a saga about Jewish sisterhood.
A Journey to Being: On Seth Greenland’s “A Kingdom of Tender Colors”
An acutely observed, well-written memoir about surviving cancer, generously leavened with humor.
Israel’s Holden Caulfield: On Yair Assulin’s “The Drive”
“The Drive” is a forceful and compelling critique of the role of the military in Israeli society.
The Sorrow of Soviet Poetry: On Lev Ozerov’s “Portraits Without Frames”
Tom Teicholz looks at “Portraits Without Frames” by Lev Ozerov.
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