Ozzie Nogg, a rabbi’s daughter — is now eighty-nine years old and has been married to her husband, Don, for seventy years. (Both milestones strike her as mind-blowing.) She writes short fiction, verse and personal essays — sometimes serious, often irreverent — usually with a Jewish slant. Ozzie’s work has appeared in Jewish weekly newspapers across the country, and her book of personal stories, Joseph’s Bones, won First Place in the 2005 Writer’s Digest Press International Self-Published Book Awards.
Ozzie Nogg, a rabbi’s daughter — is now eighty-nine years old and has been married to her husband, Don, for seventy years. (Both milestones strike her as mind-blowing.) She writes short fiction, verse and personal essays — sometimes serious, often irreverent — usually with a Jewish slant. Ozzie’s work has appeared in Jewish weekly newspapers across the country, and her book of personal stories, Joseph’s Bones, won First Place in the 2005 Writer’s Digest Press International Self-Published Book Awards.