GREAT READS → IMPRESSIONS Issue 1055 · March 26, 2025

To Save the World 

The Last Slave is a story of redemption— and so was the process that got us to the finish line

To Save the World 
I dreamed of inspiring the world with a novel about the Exodus from Egypt, and I came up with a perfect plot I could churn out in three months. But my husband saw so much more potential in the book than I could imagine.
If it could be meticulously sourced in Torah, it would bring the book to a whole new level. That was the start of a writing and editing collaboration that took much longer than either of us thought. The final product, The Last Slave, is a story of redemption — and so was the process that got us to the finish line

I

harbored dreams of changing the world and inspiring people around the globe with my words — something extremely difficult to achieve when no one reads your work. I had been writing for many years with little success. Languishing inside my computer were children’s series, novels, original musicals, songs, and article after article, doomed never to see the light of day.

Then, through amazing Hashgachah pratis — and for reasons completely unrelated to my dream — my husband ended up opening his own publishing company, Adir Press. I was immensely grateful that my work would find a willing audience.

The first book I published was an illustrated children’s book, Chanukah Back in Time. This was followed by Bullied, a high school novel about bullying, loss, and overcoming fear. Now it was time to write another book. I knew there were writers out there who churned out books every three months, and I was determined to be one of them. I would write an incredible, life-changing book in three months. I knew I could do it. All I needed was a story. I started racking my brain to come up with an idea.

Then it came to me. I had written a Pesach musical several years ago. It was then almost Succos; if I worked hard, I could turn my musical into a book and have it ready for Pesach.

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