tution; sharing commonalities from their German-Jewish an- cestry to their loneliness and their passion for books (they in- sist their relationship is platon- ic). Each has made a career out of that passion, and their friend- ship has lasted more than 60 years, documented in this histo- ry of their lives and friendship. Nazi Gold: The Full Story Of The Fifty-Five Year Swiss- Nazi Conspiracy To Steal Bil- lions From Europe's Jews And Holocaust Survivors By Tom Bower; HarperCollins; $25. This illustrated companion to filmmaker Bower's documentary of the same title is an assem- blage of a blow-by-blow chronol- ogy of Swiss evasions, past and present. The Kosher Companion: A Guide To Food, Cooking, Shopping And Services By Trudy Garfunkel; Birch Lane Press; $18.95. The first consumer guide to the ever- growing world of kosher food and kosher products. The guide explains the origin and meaning of kosher dietary laws, how to identify symbols, buy kosher meats and poultry, how to identify kosher products for vegetarians, people with allergies and more. The Melting Pot: The Forma- five Years, 1907-1914 By Charles Hamm; Oxford Uni- versity Press; $35. Musicologist Hamm analyzes the works of Berlin: 190 pub- lished songs and 106 unpublished. Berlin, who died in 1989 at age 101, most likely did not give as much criti- cal thought to his work as does Hamm, but it is in- teresting nonethe- less. A Gum K TO Pawn, COOKING . ancleriNti, AND KE.VICKY Irving Berlin: Songs From To.", OA.PUSKV, Songs Of Gener- ations: New Pearls Of Yid- dish Song By Eleanor Chana and Joseph 'After' By Melvin Jules Bukiet; St. Martin's Press; $24.95. . 0 ver the past half-century, Theodor Adorno's famous dictum that "there can be no poetry after Auschwitz" has been gradually rebutted by writers such as Primo Levi, Paul Celan and Aharon Appelfeld. They have shaped the horror of the Holocaust into memoir, po- etry and fiction, successfully linking its singularity to human experience. In doing so, these writers have given the Holocaust literary depth and scope. A second generation of writ- ers — children of the survivors — is similarly contradicting Adorno's assertion in their own post-modern literature. Melvin Jules Bukiet is one such writer. The son of Holo- caust survivors, Bukiet has writ- ten a darkly comic novel — a picaresque romp though post- war Germany, a wild and wool- ly place waiting to be organized by the Marshall Plan. After, Bukiet's first novel fol- lowing two short story collec- tions, takes place during "the two years in Europe from May 1945 to 1947 ... a blink in the waiting room for the next stage on some imponderable journey: destination Palestine, Australia, America, anyplace." Judith Bolton-Fasman is a Baltimore-based freelance writer. The novel centers on the black delegation tours Isaac's camp, market activities of 20-year-old he aggravates them with his re- Isaac Kaufman, a survivor of the visionism. A visitor asks about Aspenfeld concentration camp the ovens and Isaac says "Bread — a yeshiva boy forever trans- today." He describes the Proto- formed and hardened by his ex- cols of the Elders of Zion, a vir- periences. ulently anti-Semitic tract Isaac assembles an amiable alleging an international Jew- band of rogues, including Mar- ish conspiracy to take over the cus Morgenstern, a Dachau sur- world, as "an exemplary text, vivor and erstwhile dentist, who something to aspire to, some- approaches his forgeries as se- thing to learn from." Throughout the novel Isaac is riously as an artist. Marcus' portfolio includes papers for dis- both hero and villain, giving him placed persons, passports and a Shindler-like aura. Despite his less admirable qualities, DPIDs — dead persons' there is something identifications. Isaac and REVIEW memorable and even his comrades convince exemplary about him gullible American soldiers that the latter are necessary in that gives After a unique verac- order to bury the dead properly. ity. In the end, Isaac and his mot- One of the more inspired as- pects of the book is Bukiet's ley crew scheme to "liberate" a skewering of stereotypes. Every- mound of gold forged from the one is culpable in this period of fillings of dead Jews that is un- limbo, including inept Jewish der American guard in one of the agencies which limp into post- concentration camps. It's an in- war Europe as a "Jewish army tricate plan that veers between of do-gooders." Even when the absurdity and genius — one that well-meaning British army im- Bukiet astonishingly caps with ports a Passover seder, the camp a poignant ending: Jewish sen- inmates rebuffthe effort and de- sibilities prevail. And they also prevail in this mand pork and bread instead. Bukiet treads on dangerous arresting book — a work that ground when portraying Jewish merges the memory of the Holo- characters: One wrong move and caust and the legacy of its sur- they could become hackneyed vivors into the art that inevitably Shylocks. But skill and care pre- must be created after Auschwitz. vail, especially in his depiction — Judith Bolton-Fasman of Isaac. When a self-important Mlotek; Workmen's Circle; $19.95. An anthology of 125 Yiddish songs that were either never be- fore printed or appeared in rare and inaccessible publications by the celebrated columnists of The Forward's "Pearls of Yiddish Po- etry." To order, call (800) 922- 2558, Ext. 285. Handsome Is: Adventures With Saul Bellow: A Memoir By Harriet Wasserman; Fromm International; $23.95. For 25 years, Wasserman was Nobel laureate Saul Bellow's literary agent, his first reader, typist and, eventually, his com- petition: Last year, Bellow left Wasserman to sign up with her rival, Andrew Wylie. Part biog- raphy, part purging, the book has an interesting tone. The Neppi Modona Diaries: Reading Jewish Survival Through My Italian Family By Kate Cohen; University Press of New England. Third-generation survivor Co- hen examines the experiences of her Jewish-Italian family, the Neppi Modonas, in Fascist Italy. Using both diaries and inter- views, Cohen tells the story of the Holocaust in Italy through one single, unheroic family, reminis- cent of the film The Garden of the Finzi-Continis. Taking Root: The Origins Of The Canadian Jewish Com- munity By Gerald Tulchinsky; General Distribution Services; $19.95. One of the oldest ethnic groups in Canada, the history of the Jew- ish community in Canada is chronicled from the 1760s to the end of World War I. Look for Vol- ume II of this multi-volume work, Branching Out, to be published in the fall of 1997. Lair: German Resistance To Hitler By Theodore S. Hamerow; Belk- nap /Harvard University; $29.95. Professor emeritus of history at the University of Wisconsin, Hamerow dissects the small band of resisters in Germany and their attempt to assassinate Hitler in East Prussia. Their motives and personalities are examined. A Tale Of Two Continents: A Physicists Life In A Turbulent World By Abraham Pais; Princeton Uni- versity Press; $35. The Dutch-Jewish physicist tells the riveting story of his strug- gles to study physics while in hid- ing in Amsterdam, against the enormous backdrop of European and American 20th-century his- tory. The Twisted Muse: Musicians And Their Music In The Third Reich By Michael Kater; Oxford Uni- versity Press; $35. Kater studies the influence of the Nazis over whether or not, if one was a musician in Germany or Austria, one would be em- ployed, according to Hitler's tastes and whether that musician be- came a member of the Nazi Par- ty. Elisabeth Schwarzkopf By Alan Jefferson; Northeastern University Press; $29.95. Jefferson explores the German soprano's denial, at first, of her involvement in the Naii Party, and ultimately, her admission of it in 1983, excusing her involve- ment with the statement, "Vissi d'arte (I lived for art)." NEW IN PAPERBACK Ben-Gurion And The Holo- caust By Shabtai Teveth; Harcourt Brace & Co.; $30. Israeli historian, journalist and Ben-Gurion biographer, Teveth has given his new biography of Ben-Gurion a self-proclaimed "pro-Ben-Gurion voice in the politicized debate on Jewish res- cue efforts during the Holocaust." Discussed is the accusation that Ben-Gurion. and his followers were unwilling to transfer ener- gies from building a Jewish state in Palestine to saving Jewish lives in Europe. The Statement By Brian Moore; William Abra- hams /Plume; $11.95. Irish-born Moore tells the fic- tional story of a Frenchman who, involved with the Vichy govern- ment and the murder of Jews during World War II, has evad- ed justice for decades. The psy- chological thriller, based on the real-life flight of Paul Touvier, re- flects the moral ambivalence of both French politicians and the Roman Catholic Church. On The Road To The Wolf's —Compiled by Lynne Konstantin