The tale of a liberal Jewish jazz musician from Brooklyn, who through an unlikely series of events, ultimately becomes Richard Nixon's law partner, po- litical adviser and Watergate counsel. Garment, the son of im- migrants, grew up to be one of the most powerful lawyers in Washington, and tells his story in this warm and candid mem- oir. For The Hell Of It: The Life And Times Of Abbie Hoff- man By Jonah Raskin; Berkeley: Univ. of Calif Press; $24.95. Rock and roll, movements against injustice, exuberant sex, Antonin Artaud and the Jewish dadaism of the Marx brothers, Sid Caesar and Lenny Bruce: the life of the Yippie is a study of the social and political '60s. Capturing The Moment: The Sports Photography Of Bar- ton Silverman By Barton Silverman; Penguin Studio; $34.95. Sports lovers, here's the book for you: Silverman, a New York Times sports photographer since 1964, takes the reader on a tour through the last 30 years of both professional and nonprofession- al athletic competition, from the sublime to the ridiculous. Lucien's Story By Aleksandra Kroh; Marlboro Press !Northwestern Univ. Press; $39.95 I cloth; $11.95 I paper. A Jewish boy from Paris spent 18 months in two German con- centration camps, including Bergen-Belsen. That childhood journey is related 50 years later, as Professor Lucien Duckstein dictates to Kroh's tape recorder, inventing moan-words and scream-words for emotions too unpronounceable. Resistance Of The Heart: Intermarriage And The Rosenstrasse Protest In Nazi Germany By Nathan Stoltzfus; Norton; $30. In February of 1993, hundreds of gentile women hurried to a building on Berlin's Rosenstrasse street, where their Jewish hus- bands had been gathered as part of the Final Roundup. Stoltzfus explores an unprecedented ex- ample of open German resis- tance to Nazi persecution. This dynamic biography of the late Israeli prime minister lends itself to a description of Israeli politics, history and diplomacy and the role of American Jews in Israeli politics. — Compiled by Lynne Konstantin By Isabelle Maynarch. University of Iowa Press; cloth/$24.95; paper/$13.95. laywright and oral historian Maynard introduces us to the tiful younger aunt who married Isabelle Maynard spins an people and places that made up a Russian Orthodox man prone to anti-Semitic enchanting and true-life tale her world. There was Braver- man, the German Jew her slurs when drunk. REVIEW of growing up Jewish in pre- From the awk- Communist China in China grandmother took in after he lost his entire family in the Holo- ward feelings of im- Dreams. pending adolescence to a Born in 1929, the only child growing sense of guilt and of Russian Jewish parents who confusion over her com- had fled the Communist Rev- plete lack of knowledge of olution, Maynard, along with her adopted homeland a large number of other Jew- and the people inhabiting ish refugees, grew up in the it, Maynard recounts in city of Tientsin on the North Gr1fl ii4 [Ill Jewisll intimate detail what it China Sea. Without passports was like growing up in a or another country to take place where she was them, Maynard and her fam- thrice alienated: from the ily lived in one of the several Russian community as a European "concessions" carved Jew; from the foreign pop- out of the bustling trading port, ulation with homes to re- almost completely removed turn to; and finally, by from anything remotely Chi- choice, from the Chinese nese. people themselves. The Jews of Tientsin, most Maynard and her fam- of whom thought of their ily eventually made it to adopted home as simply a pit the United States in 1948, stop on the way to the United on the heels of a second States or Israel, built a thriv- Communist revolution, ing and self-sufficient commu- having endured the nity complete with their own Japanese invasion and 25 synagogue, school and social years of exile. club. There Maynard went As Maynard recounts, about the everyday business of "I have carried China all growing up: attending French my life. I do not claim ac- lessons, school dances, Hebrew China Dreams tells Isabelle Maynard's story of her curacy of history, only ac- unique Jewish community. school and slumber parties. curacy of the heart." And In several short vignettes, caust; the outgoing blonde-haired for that, she succeeds beautiful- daughter of an American Em- ly. Leslie Joseph is a freelance editor bassy official, "always talking and an avocational reader. - Leslie Joseph about having fun"; and the beau- ti r "Right now I'm reading Freud: From Youthful Dream to Midlife Crisis, by Peter Newton. I was looking in the psychology section, and thought it looked interesting. I enjoy a good biography, and my mother grew up in Vien- na, like Freud, so it has a background I'm interested in." Shalom, Friend: The Life And Legacy Of Yitzhak Rabin By the Jerusalem Report staff; edited by David Horovitz; New- market; $24.95. China Dreams: Growing Up Jewish In Tientsin p ame: Mel Borin Residence: West Bloomfield Occupation: Real Estate Name: Sharon Silverman Residence: Waterford Occupation: Retired Ele mentary School Teacher "I'm just starting Chicken Soup for the Woman's Soul, by Barbara Canfield. Fourteen months ago I had surgery and a friend gave me the first one Chicken Soup for the Soul. My friend thought it was a [hu morj book, but it was actually very serious, and helpful at the time of my surgery. So picked up the Woman's Soul. "I like it because it has short little things that you can read a bit and then put down. You don't have to go right back to it." Name: William Fox Occupation: Reliability En- gineer Residence: Berkley "Right now I'm reading Mansfield Park by Jane Austen. I'm in the middle of that I haven't finished it yet, but I like it a lot. There have been all the different movies of [Austen's] books made in the last year or so, and I'd never read the books. So I've read Prick and Prejudice and Persuasion as well." on Reading a good book? "0 , to share your recoinmendatio photo of yourself (preferably black and w hit a daytime phone number to Lynne Konstantin, Boo aielL 27676 Franklin Road, Southfield, MI 48034. If you want your photo returned, you must include a self-addressed stamped envelope.