Alida Brill is an author, social critic and advocate for women and girls. Her work and expertise span diverse topics. She has written and spoken about the personal and public issues surrounding women and chronic illness, and questions of medical privacy. She is a passionate advocate for a new and intergenerational 21st century feminist dialogue. Her earlier work on the status of freedom, civil liberties and social justice has taken on new meaning in the era of fear in our post-9-11 world.
Her most recent book is Dancing at the River's Edge: A Patient and Her Doctor Negotiate a Life With Chronic Illness (Schaffner Press, 2009), a dual memoir with her physician Michael D. Lockshin, M.D.
She is also the author of Nobody’s Business: The Paradoxes of Privacy (1990); and co-author of the landmark book, Dimensions of Tolerance: What Americans Believe About Civil Liberties (1983). She is the editor of A Rising Public Voice: Women in Politics Worldwide (1995). Her writing appears in popular and professional periodicals and journals and on webzines.
She has been a featured speaker at a variety of conferences and a guest lecturer at many universities and colleges in the Unites States and abroad. A frequent contributor to anthologies, her longer essays and monographs include: “Tomorrowland at 40: Lakewood, California,” in Rethinking Los Angeles (1996); “From the Shards,” in To Mend the World: Women Reflect on 9/11 (2002).
Brill tweets from @FromThisTerrace.
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A Rising Public Voice/Women in Politics Worldwide
Fem Press and the UN -
Dimensions of Tolerance
Basic Books and Russell Sage Foundation -
From the Shards To Mend the World
White Pine Press -
Tomorrowland Turns 40
Rethinking Los Angeles -
Dancing at the River's Edge
Schaffner Press -
Nobody's Business: The Paradox of Privacy
Addison-Wesley -
Chronic Healing Blog
Psychology Today -
From This Terrace
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WMC Features
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My Subversive Barbie
[2007] -
Betty Friedan, Map-Maker
[2006] -
DEAR PRINCESS GRACE, DEAR BETTY: The Memoir of a Romantic Feminist
Schaffner Press [2016] -
Betty Friedan, Considered
Huffington Post [February 4, 2016]















