The body, the soul, and the Jewish culture of fertility.
Year after year, most of what gets served up to young Jewish readers is poorly conceived, substantively shallow, and reeking of chicken-soup nostalgia.
Moving beyond the abortion debate.
Elliot Jager’s personal reflections on Judaism and infertility.
What are people good for, anyway?
A book review.
Too much harmony can be a problem.
A recent trend among religious Christians allows children to decide whether to attend church. They must come to their own conclusions about religion, the thinking. . .
A new collection of Kafka short stories retold for children is scarier than any fairy tale—but only for parents.
A new Pew survey shows that younger Americans have more relaxed attitudes toward marriage and parenthood than their elders—until they become spouses and parents themselves.