DISTINCTIVE RESIDENCES DISTINCTIVF RESIDENCES BOOKS translation. He has an extensive collection on the Russian author Boris Pasternak. Holtzman keeps his literary book collection at home. Bob McKelvey, Detroit Free Press book editor, wrote about Holtzman's home collection of literary American giants, such as Faulkner, Hemingway, Nathaniel West and American Indian authors. "It's a collection of incalculable value to bibliophiles and scholars," wrote McKelvey. Holtzman promotes reading to his clients. In his apartment com- plex Village Green, there are A moment of calm under your poolside umbrella. Nearby, the clubhouse, featuring a private health club and glass-enclosed jacuzzi, ■ Footbridges and reflecting ponds, A gatehouse entrance and your own individual intrusion alarm, In your apartment, a Euro-designed kitchen with built-in microwave. A windowed breakfast nook. Cathedral ceilings and a wood-burning fireplace. The rush of a waterfall beneath your balcony. ■ Residential pleasures, reserved for that time you call your own at Village Green. Furnished Executive Rentals Available One-bedroom, one-bedroom with den, and two-bedroom units from $600. Twelve Mile Road, east of Northwestern Highway in Southfield. Monday-Friday 10-6, Saturday 10-5, Sunday 12-5 Holtzman collects books in Hebrew, Arabic and Russian. bookshelves. "Reading is an edge to a quality of life," says Holtzman. To prospective book collectors, Holtzman suggests collecting books by one author instead of books by several authors and to look for books in mint condition. Holtzman believes that how you live is simply a reflection of how you see yourself. "Some people say your cars reflect yourself, but I prefer to think your interiors more accurately reflect that view." If that's the case, then Holtzman lives in a world of knowledge. CHAIRPEOPLE N No House Is A Home Without A Subscription To The Jewish News. Call 354-6060 To Get Yours. THE JEWISH NEWS 86 HOME eil Master and wife Deanna Asker bring the chairpeople to life in Detroit. They've taken classic oak chairs and acrylically transformed them into people you know and would like to sit on. They're original, colorful, witty and even comfortable. They can be seen at the Ariana art gallery in Birmingham. But they are all very different ex- cept for one common character- istic — the chairpeople have egos and they're inflating just as fast as their popularity. I