Sometimes I feel like those born-again folk, always working on their faith, but I'm always working on my atheism. We all have our struggles.
When I was living in Jerusalem, I used to write in a coffee shop called Tmol Shilshom. I'd sit at the same table every day and work. And right next to my seat was a weathered wingback chair by a window.
It's so easy to call something a Jewish story or a gay story or a woman's story. Aesthetically, if a story is not universal, it has failed. Your obligation is to the story. One rule creatively, and emotionally, is its universality.
Empathy is what obsesses me. And watching empathy recede in the world is terrifying.
So writing stories is not easier in comparison to the playwriting or translation; the stories are easier in league with them.
I'm just very interested, fascinated, heartbroken, obsessed with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and our need to find peace on that front... Everyone's always, like, victim and avenger at the same time.