The newest books — by Jewish authors, about Jewish subjects or of interest to Jewish readers. brates the virtues of idealism and spirit." 'The First Stone' No New Jokes H Bborn By Steven Bloom; Norton; $23. Jokes are the de- fense of a group of five friends in 1949 Brooklyn. The fo- cus is on Izzy, a boxer-turned-jazz singer and World War II veteran who carries the im- age of his father ly- ing dead on a muddy street in Poland. Bloom, born and raised in Brooklyn, now teaches at the University of Heidelberg in Germany; No New Jokes was the 1995 winner of the Associated Writing Pro- grams Award. By John Briley; Morrow; $24. loak and dagger ... and a veil. The intrigue builds These are the basics of John as the husband's Briley's latest novel, The envious brother, be- lieving Lisa is a spy, First Stone. Briley, a film critic and lec- concocts many turer, won an Oscar and a Gold- plans to trap her. Lisa deftly ma- en Globe award for his neuvers her way in screenplay for Gandhi. In Stone, Briley once again manages to the conspiracy- laden harem, work together personal and the intrigue and interna- REVIEW reader goes tional events. This fast- along eager- paced story is told with exacting visual details; with ly because of Bri- added touches of romance, he ley's artful weaving has crafted a tale to suit all of real events and figures with an in- tastes. Jewish-American Lisa Coop- side look at Saudi er's niece and nephew are killed society from a during her visit to their Israeli woman's point of kibbutz. She is ripe for picking view. We go, as it by the Mossad, which recruits were, behind the her to meet and marry a promi- veil. Marines are nent, rich Saudi and to live in his killed in Beirut; country as a mole. Lisa lives in the harem and, Lisa's husband ris- despite the dangers of politics, es to power and the despite the great cultural dif- traps for Lisa grow ferences, despite the existence more numerous of another wife, she falls in love and difficult to evade. Finally, she is forced to make a choice be- with her husband. tween her husband and her peo- Though reluctant to be sub- missive to Muslim law, Lisa goes ple, between a love which has along with the plan as she waits grown and a country she has to be of service to the Mossad. sworn to serve. Briley creates vivid scenes throughout of desert landscapes Sy Manello is our editorial and cities, harem life, Saudi fam- assistant and an avid reader. C FICTION C./ LLJ C/D LIJ C.) CC LL1 LLJ H- 82 Love Invents Us By Amy Bloom; Ran- dom House; $21. Amy Bloom's col- lection of short sto- ries, Come to Me, was a finalist for the National Book Award. In her first novel, Love Invents Us, Bloom tells the story of Elizabeth, a shy, chubby girl who, less than per- fect, is introduced to unimagined places and unknown parts of herself. Gould: A Novel In Two Nov- els By Stephen Dixon; Henry Holt & Co.; $24. We first meet 17-year-old ily manipulations and the poli- tics of the time and place. The book is a stimulating ex- perience. It will, no doubt, make its way onto the screen with equally satisfying results. The fast-paced intrigue and the vi- suals are a winning combination — Sy Manello Gould Bookbinder as a freshman Pulitzer Prize-winning author of in college. Soon after, he has got- The Armies of the Night and The ten two girls pregnant, Executioner's Song here tells the the second of which he story of a devout carpenter. It is denies and refuses fi- a readable account of "a man nancial assistance for thrust forward by the visions he an abortion. He later receives, the sermons he offers, learns the girl has died and the miracles he enacts until of a drug overdose. he comes to the apocalyptic end Gould is the story of an of his powers." educated, immature, "sexually voracious" An Independent Woman male and his dragging By Howard Fast; Harcourt Brace; $25. struggle to- First there was The 'n ward matu- Immigrants. What fol- rity, by the lowed was a saga of author ofIn- terstate, a finalist for ACCORDING one family, from gen- the National Book TO THE SON eration to generation. And now, said the New Award. York Times of the long- awaited conclusion to The Gospel Ac- The Immigrants saga, cording To The Son Fast's writing is "sat- By Norman Mailer; isfying, old-fashioned Random House; $22. storytelling that cele- The two times GOSPEL NORMAN MAILER Pandaemonium By Leslie Epstein; St. Martin's Press; $24.95. Says the New York Times: "Something awfully like hell breaks loose in this wild Holly- wood novel set early in World War II and popu- lated by dreamy European exiles and unsleeping movieland types." Touch And Go By Eugene Stein; Weisbach /Morrow; $22. The author of Straightjacket and Tie, Stein's stories have appeared in Harper's and The Pushcart Prize An- thology. In Touch and Go, Stein has followed up his previous novel with a collection of 13 short sto- ries, evoking strange, yet strange- ly familiar worlds and feelings. Inventing Mem- ory: A Novel Of Mothers And Daughters By Erica Jong; HarperCollins; $25. The author of Fear of Flying tells the tale of four gen- erations of head- strong women caught up in the changes of the times, and redefin- ing what their roles as women mean . Five Women By Rona Jaffe; Donald I. Fine Books; $24.95. The author of Class Reunion is up to her old tricks: Five friends meet every week at a restaurant on New York's Up- per East Side, re- vealing their secrets and their survival tactics. The Good Ameri- can By Ted Flicker; Sha- lako; $19.95. Joseph von Ritter, a German Jew, immigrates to America during the Civil War, against a backdrop of an early wave of immigration to the Unit- ed States. Eve's Apple By Jonathan Rosen; Random House; $24. In his debut novel, Rosen (cul- tural editor of The Forward) ex- plores "how seductive illness can be" — in the case of Eve's Apple, anorexia nervosa and teen-age suicide. Joseph's ob- session with his girlfriend Ruth and the possibility of her returning to her teen-age bulimic habits, spurred by his own sister's sui- cide at age 16, is as morbid as any eat- ing disorder. NON- FICTION Old Books, Rare Friends: Two Literary Sleuths And Their Shared Passion By Leona Rosten- berg and Madeleine Stern; Doubleday; $21.95. When trying to obtain a doctorate in literature, a profes- sor said to Rosten- berg: "Do not set your sights too high. You have two grave disadvantages. You are a woman and a Jew." It's been said that Rostenberg and Stern are an insti- one -