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Barbara Bensoussan

Barbara Bensoussan

Barbara Bensoussan is the quintessential Jewish dropout who never finished her Ph.D. but went on to teach English and Introductory Psychology at the University of Michigan.  She worked as a social worker for OHEL, an ESL teacher, and various other stints before easing into full time writing.  Her 20-year-plus career followed the growth of frum publishing, and she wrote articles for many Jewish publications before settling in at Mishpacha.  Barbara is the author of the young adult novel A New Song (Targum), the food memoir The Well-Spiced Life (Israel Bookshop), and the co-author of Converted Masters, an art book; she has also authored private memoirs and taught writing workshops.  All of this, of course, gets accomplished in the margins of Barbara’s day job as a wife, mother and grandmother.

LATEST ARTICLE
Magazine Feature
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
Archive
Profiles
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Dr. David Lieberman, a popular leader in the field of human behavior and relationships who has penned numerous self-help books, has used his techniques for consulting for the FBI ...
Magazine Feature
Wednesday, January 09, 2013
A Conversation with Charlie Harary,Words from the heart are taken to heart, and what Rabbi Moshe Ibn Ezra said many yea ...
Profiles
Wednesday, January 02, 2013
If you’re British and hear the name Ashley Blaker, you’ll probably start to giggle. Blaker, one of the funniest men in the British entertainment industry who today wears a black h ...
Magazine Feature
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
For many people, social gambling is an innocuous way to pass the time. For others gambling is something more — an addictive thrill that adds excitement to life. Who is a candidate ...
Profiles
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
For young Jews of the 1960s and 1970s, the cry “Let my people go” didn’t refer only to Pharaoh and Mitzrayim. This was also the battle cry of the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry ...
Magazine Feature
Wednesday, September 07, 2011
When Avremel Zelmanowitz found himself alone with a colleague in a burning building, his kindness and loyalty created a kiddush Hashem that ricocheted around the globe.
Profiles
Wednesday, April 06, 2011
The Manischewitz company, which we Americans all grew up associating with Yiddish-speaking bubbys and matzoh-ball soup, is now ...
Family First Feature
Wednesday, February 02, 2011
In today’s financial atmosphere, many women are forced to seek employment to supplement the family’s income. What happens whe ...
Profiles
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Legally blind, and living in the simplest of apartments, Naomi Adir is hardly your typical philanthropist. Yet over the de ...