Since 1939 Cordially invites you to celebrate with us our 59th year of business serving the metropolitan (Detroit area. Legal Eagle U-M grad Brad Meltzer loves the law, but writing is his passion. Dnhonor of this event, on 3ulg 16 17 1.8 19 &z July 24 25, 26 ( Mife will roll back our prices to 1977 7618 (433odward L./give., (Detroit (31,3) 871 1590 1-Reservations are suggested (offer good only at our Tetrait location) Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • Bloomfield Plaza • 248-851-0313 in Cantonese, &Awn Jlandctrin joods • excellent (Vitae jish and Steaks W Orchard Lake Rd. • 932-3133 Xunch 'Buffet • Tanquea oom available LhloWday-`Thursday (11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.) 6/5 1998 100 Batch the best Music Reviews in JN Entertainment SUZANNE CHESSLER Special To The Jewish News 7, here's no mystery about whether Brad Meltzer will include Ann Arbor refer- ences in his crime novels. The University of Michigan (U-M) graduate thinks of those links as a way to "tip that hat and say thank you." In his second book, Dead Even, which he signs June 9 at Borders in Birmingham, Meltzer dresses a charac- ter in a U-M T-shirt and names a law firm after his former roommate, Judd Winick. "The University of Michigan was the only place I wanted to go [after high school], and I sent out only one college application," said Meltzer, 28, who has joined the growing list of attorneys turning down real cases in favor of devising their own for fiction's legal thriller market. "I went to another law school because I wanted to see other universi- ties and because my wife — we had just become engaged — was going to Columbia." With the Meltzers' shared career as the starting concept for the book, Dead Even pits fictional husband and wife lawyers Oared Lynch and Sara Tate) against each other in court as they take opposing sides of the same case. Once at work, Jared and Sara receive vicious threats that soon put their relationship in danger. Each is told, in secret, to win the case or the other will die. Keeping these threats hidden, try- ing to avert disaster and uncovering the reasons behind the intimidation build the plot, which also has Meltzer's Judaism as part of its foun- dation. "Dead Even is a great deal about faith — faith in marriage, faith in the ones you love and faith in yourself," said the author, whose first novel, The Tenth Justice, climbed the best seller lists. "I really can only draw on my reli- gion for that. Religion plays a major role for me in flushing out what faith is and how people interact with faith." Meltzer describes his second book as more personal than the first. Unlike The Tenth Justice, which focused on a friendship, this focuses on a relation- ship. "Every day, when I sat down to write, I would ask myself how far I would go to save my wife and how far she would go to save me," Meltzer said. "The love that Sara has for Jared and Jared has for Sara — both of them — is the love I have for her." Meltzer, married to his high-school sweetheart, Cori Flam, grew up in Brooklyn and moved with his family to Miami. While in high school, he served as student government president and was featured in Parade magazine after he started a school protest by wearing a skirt. The air conditioning had broken down, and the dress code said boys couldn't wear shorts. After receiving his undergraduate degree from U-M in 1992, with a major in history and a minor in English, Meltzer was recruited into marketing by Games magazine pub- lisher Eli Segal. Segal soon left the magazine to become Bill Clinton's chief of staff for the 1992 presidential campaign, and later, in the summer of 1994, Segal again recruited Meltzer, this time as a speech writer for AmeriCorps, Clinton's national service program. Already studying law at Columbia University, Meltzer co-wrote the AmeriCorps oath of service, which was delivered by President Clinton to new members. "It was just a thrill hearing some- thing I had worked on [spoken] by the president," said Meltzer, who now makes his home in Washington, D.C. During that summer, Meltzer developed the idea for The Tenth Justice. He interviewed former clerks at the Supreme Court and was encouraged to hear that his story line was plausible. Meltzer finished his debut novel while at Columbia, where he con- vinced one of his professors to give him academic credit for the mystery. He also taught law to eighth-graders