The name of our publication is an homage to The Omni-Americans, Albert Murray’s 1970 book written from the heights of his Harlem apartment where Murray redefined the lines of American identity. By exploring the arts and intellectual life and celebrating the depths of American culture, The Omni-American Review likewise aspires to be a spiritual-intellectual home for those who know that “for all their traditional antagonisms and obvious differences, the so-called black people and the so-called white people of the United States resemble nobody else in the world as much as they resemble each other.”

His scholarly, literary and journalistic articles and essays have appeared in Moment Magazine, The Tel Aviv Review of Books, White Rose Magazine, The Diplomat, Forward, The Literary Review, Tiferet, The Tower Magazine, Mosaic Magazine, Nomos Journal, Commentary, The Weekly Standard, Jewish Ideas Daily, The Jewish Review of Books, The Madison Review, Midnight East, Haaretz, Aqdamot, Maqor Rishon and more.

He is the founding editor-in-chief of Harlem World Magazine, and his byline has been featured in American Legacy, Salon, Village Voice, New Republic, The Root, Uptown, Integral Life, and the New York Daily News as a jazz columnist.