In Lost and Found, Mendel, a Holocaust survivor, chooses between life in Bolton and reparations in Israel. "Gentle, funny, poignant, and magical, the book celebrates the small miracles of ordinary life." A rabbi discovers he can heal. Sterile people give birth. A mysterious bookstore burns. A cookbook divides the sisterhood. Refugees are welcomed. The LA Times Book Review gave it a Critics' Commendation and said, "Greene is a born storyteller." The Indianapolis News wrote, "...The book goes down like fine vintage wine." Hadassah Magazine reviewed Lost and Found, saying, "It belongs on the same bookshelf with Mark Twain."