Writer and filmmaker Elizabeth Rynecki searched the globe to the lost art of her great grandfather, Moshe Rynecki, who painted almost 800 scenes of Jewish Polish life before he was sent to the Warsaw Ghetto and was later murdered at the Majdanek concentration camp. She wrote about this journey in Chasing Portraits: A Great-Granddaughter’s Quest for Her Lost Art Legacy and later produced a documentary of this search in the film Chasing Portraits. We recently spoke to Rynecki about her book, her film, and her quest for answers.
Read MorePam Logan, author of Compassion Mandala and founder of the Kham Aid Foundation, an NGO bringing resources to Tibet, talks about everything from starting an NGO to international relationships to the opportunities and challenges facing today’s non-profit organizations.
Read MoreTo access world literature beyond what was translated and censored in the Islamic Republic, I had to improve my English and enter the world of banned books which were smuggled in alongside alcohol, Western film, and music. Limited and expensive, but accessible through the right contacts. Reading books from across the world was a turning point in my life.
Read MoreJessica J. Lee travels to her mother’s birthplace of Taiwan to trace her grandparents’ background, something they rarely spoke of while they were alive. Lee is an environmental historian, and she leans on this expertise to braid the conventional trappings of memoir with a geological understanding of Taiwan’s mountainous regions, rivers, and forests.
Read MoreJulianne Pachico’s second novel is a vivid portrait of a woman and searching for identity in present-day Medellin.
Read MoreAngie Cruz, award-winning author of Dominicana, Soledad, and Let it Rain, discusses the most-anticipated books of winter/spring 2021.
Read MorePam Mandel, travel writer and author of The Same River Twice shares her thoughts on the joys of getting lost, how travel helps us become ourselves, and her ongoing quest for the strange, beautiful, and unknown.
Read MoreIf you want a spirited book club discussion, choose forbidden love. Here are some great reads that feature international affairs worth talking about.
Read MoreIn Peace Adzo Medie’s debut novel, His Only Wife, a young Ghanian woman leaves home for the promise of the metropolis of Accra. But upward mobility comes with a price.
Read MoreA nameless woman enters a hotel room. She’s been here once before. In the years since, the room hasn’t changed, but she has. Forever caught between check-in and check-out, she will go on to occupy other hotel rooms. From Avignon to Oslo, Auckland to Austin, each is as anonymous as the last but bound by the rules of her choosing.
Read MoreCarmen Suen, a Hong Kong writer who moved to the U.S. with her Black-American husband, examines Asian attitudes toward racism and what we can all learn by reading.
Read MoreMaggie Downs spent a year backpacking solo through seventeen countries―completing the bucket list her dying mother could not. We spoke about outlasting fear, seeing the world on a person level, and what to do when the thing that makes you who you are is suddenly off-limits.
Read MoreSilvia Moreno-Garcia’s Mexican Gothic offers a refreshing departure from stereotypical themes and a scathing critique of the colonial point-of-view that makes them so ubiquitous.
Read MoreLisa Niver, now a prolific travel writer, blogger and television commentator, writes about reinventing herself after divorce and the books that helped her succeed.
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