Midge Decter

Midge Decter was born 7/25/27 in St. Paul, Minnesota and attended the University of Minnesota, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, and New York University.  Her first job was secretary to the editor of Commentary, the intellectual magazine published by the American Jewish Committee. She later worked as an assistant editor at Midstream magazine, managing editor at Commentary, editor at Harper's Magazine, and was an editor at Legacy Books and at Basic Books. She also served as executive director of the Committee for a Free World, an anticommunist organization disbanded after the collapse of the Berlin Wall. She is the author of several books, The Liberated Woman & Other Americans (1970); The New Chastity and Other Arguments Against Women's Liberation (1972); Liberal Parents, Radical Children (1975), and Rumsfeld: A Personal Portrait (2003). She is on the board of directors of the Heritage Foundation and a senior fellow at the Institute of Religion and Public Life. Her second husband, Norman Podhoretz, is editor of Commentary. Decter has four children. She is currently President of The Philadelphia Society.   

As member of the Heritage Foundation Board of Trustees


Amazon listings for three recent books of Midge Decter:

Rumsfeld : A Personal Portrait
: 

Always Right: Selected Writings of Midge Decter, ed. Phillip N Truluck (Editor)

An Old Wife's Tale: My Seven Decades in Love and War

Midge Decter’s contribution to the foreign policy panel at the 40th Gala! Meeting of The Philadelphia Society.

Midge Decter’s review of George Soros’ The Open Society and Its Enemy: A review of The Bubble of American Supremacy in The Claremont Review of Books. 

Interview in National Review Online about Rumsfeld Book.