THE ART OF THOMAS WILMER DEWING beauty Reconfigured The newest books by Jewish authors, about Jewish subjects or of interest to Jewish readers. 'Fragments An Interior (detail), Thomas Wilmer Dewing: c. I9 I Nourish your love of beauty with the spectacular paintings created by American artist Thomas Wilmer Dewing, one of the foremost painters of the 19th century. Binjamin Wilkomirski; Schocken; $20 concert musician and instrument maker lives in Switzerland. He thinks is name is Binjamin Wilkomirski, and he thinks he must be around 56 years old. But of these facts and others he can- not be sure. For the Holocaust de- prived him not only of his mother, father, brothers and language, but of his entire personal history. In his stunning memoir, Frag- ments, Binjamin Wilkomirski re- constructs the nightmare of his wartime years. The book is a bit difficult to follow, for Wilkomirs- ki has chosen to write it as he re- members it, as a child. It does not follow a linear chronology but skips between times and loca- tions as one memory triggers an- other. Though there may be skepti- cism regarding the accuracy of a very young child's memory, Wilkomirski's recountings are shockingly detailed, full of al- most unbearable details. Through chance and tragic circumstances, Wilkomirski finds himself alone at Majdanek concentration camp at the age of 3. In one of his most chilling rem- iniscences, he tells of the dis- cussion between the young boys in his barracks regarding the concept of "mother." Some boys Lynne Avadenka is a Huntington Woods artist. NONFICTION TO BE CHASIDIC: A CONTEMPORARY GUIDE don't understand the word's to Krakow after the war to live in a children's home; meaning; others are ab- he leaves Krakow for solutely convinced there REVIEW Switzerland when were no mothers left any- Krakow, after the war, where in the world. Like other survivors, he stays again becomes a dangerous place for Jews. In Switzerland, he is adopted by foster parents, but his nightmare follows him every- where. As a Jew with American grandparents, I have always' been drawn to the European ex- periences of the older Jewish generation. I have read many Holocaust accounts and person- al reminiscences, but never a book like this. In the same way that Anne Frank's diary allows c c s us to focus intimately on one Jewish life and thereby identify with that life, Wilkomirski's cD memoir allows us into the 6 thoughts of one tiny, defenseless F2' Jewish child at a terrible time in . the history of the world. We can- VE -1 not imagine what he has expe- rienced, so he tells us. "I wrote these fragments of Binjamin Wilkomirski's Fragments is memory to explore both myself the winner of the 1996 National Jewish and my earliest childhood; it Book Award for Autobiography/Memoir. may also have been an attempt alive through sheer luck and the to set myself free." Wilkomirs- compassion of those who look out ki concludes with these words for him. Sometimes these pro- and we are grateful for them and tectors have names; sometimes for all he has conveyed to us in they are other children, some- his powerful and deeply dis- times adults. He hides hi a peas- turbing book. ant woman's home; he spends —Lynne Avadenka years in Majdanek; he returns Sunday, January 19, 2 p.m. Guest speaker is Suzanne Smeaton, gallery director, Eli Wilner & Co., New York. Free with museum admission; recommended $4 adults, $1 children, members free. Exhibition admission: $4 adults; $1 children, members free. Hours: II am.-4 p.m. Wednesdays-Fridays, I I a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. utteligan awe, 1:•,- drrs am adrxrd affitiry Programs made possible with support from the Michigan Councillor Arts and Cultural Affairs. o whose own brother "committed suicide" while in Bettelheim's care — explores the roots and consequences of Bettelheim's fab- ricated credentials and patterns of dishonesty. By Rabbi Chaim Dalfin; Jason Aronson Inc.; $30. How compatible is Torah ob- NEW YORK JEWS AND servance with the modem world? THE GREAT DEPRESSION: This question as well as equally UNCERTAIN PROMISE perplexing ones are discussed by Rabbi Dalfin, drawing upon of- By Beth S. Wenger; Yale Univer- ten overlooked sources of Jewish sity Press; $25. A professor of history and Torah schol- Jewish history, arship. Wenger looks at a generation of immi- THE CREATION grants and their OF DR. B: A children, facing an BIOGRAPHY OF unpredictable future BRUNO in the country paved BE1TELHEIM By Richard Pollak; Si mon & Schuster; $28. In this expose of one of the best-known child psychologists, Pollak — "A PERFECT MARRIAGE: THE ART OF • THOMAS WILMER DEWING AND THE FRAME DESIGNS OF STANFORD WHITE" The Creation of Dr. B— Richard Pollak's new exposé of child psychologist Bruno Bettelheim. THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS 5200 Woodward Ave., Detroit, MI 48202 in gold. Publishers Weekly says "readers interested in the histo- ry of Jews in New York will ap- preciate the author's thorough treatment of a decade of transi- tion." NEW IN PAPERBACK JULIUS KNIPL, REAL ES- TATE PHOTOGRAPHER: STORIES By Ben Katchor; Little, Brown; $12.95. The comic strip style of Ben Katchor has been described as "Max Beckmann with dialogue balloons." The protagonist of this work of "fiction," Julius Knipl — Yiddish for "nest egg" — simul- taneously conjures present-day New York City and that of the 1940s. — Compiled by Lynne Konstantin 29203 Northwestern Hwy. • Southfield (810) 356-5454 Advertise in our new Entertainment Section! , Call The Saks Department (810) 354-7123 Ext. 209 DETROM THE JEWISH NEWS