•4 :•••;,•0 ‘ On The Bookshelf True Grits: With Carolina on his mind, Eli Evans, the poet laureate of Southern Jewry, has updated his landmark "The Provincials" 25 years after it first appeared. NamimalleMacat Is pleased to announce the $395 LUNCH SPECIALS Served Mon.-Sat. from 11:00 am to 3:00 pm your choice of: • Soup and Salad • Sandwich and Cup of Soup • Sandwich and Salad for $395 Banquet Facilities Available Saturday Afternoons, Nights and Sundays. Whether a wedding, shower, Bar/Bat Mitzvah, Anniversary or any special occasion, The Sheik would love to serve you. ftffIENMEMELS, Open for Lund) ono Dinner 7 -Days 4189 Orcharo [the Roa6 Orchar) cake 7/3 1998 86 248-865-000 ). 248 - 863 - 0020 SANDEE BRAWARSKY Special to The Jewish News also the author of Judah 1? Benjamin: The Jewish Confederate, which he worked on for ten years, and The IV Lonely Days Were Sundays: Reflections of a Jewish Southerner, a collection of essays. His next book is about American Jews and the institution of • slavery. In The Provincials, Evans' story- telling gifts translate into an engaging narrative on the page. He depicts the paradox of having "inherited the Jewish longing for a homeland while being raised with the Southerner's sense of home." ithin moments of meet- ing Eli Evans, it's clear that he's not the typical New Yorker. He's more polite than most, and he's a natural storyteller. But it's his accent that places his roots far from even New York's outer boroughs: He's a son of Durham, N.C., where his father was the first Jewish mayor in the city's his- tory. Evans wears his Southern Jewishness the way a Texan wears his Stetson, with pride. i. But don't expect to find him sit- ting on a porch, strumming the banjo (although he does play). He's a son of Gotham too, having moved to New York in 1969, and he's a well-connected New Yorker. In his Madison Avenue office, Evans directs the Revson Foundation, which supports projects in urban affairs, education, biomedical research and Jewish education. Last fall, a new edition of Evans' landmark book, The Provincials: A in the South Personal History of (The Free Press; $16) was pub- lished. Originally published in 1973, the book, a successful combi- nation of journalism, autobiography and history that explores the nuances of Southern Jewish identity Eli N Evans: "The burden of bein Mister — and belongs on bookshelves next Jew envelops you in a cocoon of sel -con- sciousness, an extra dimension to whatever to Irving Howe's classic World of you say or do — the small voice always Our Fathers — has stayed in print whispering, 'What impression are you mak- for almost 25 years, which is an ing?' unusual feat. For this updated ver- sion, Evans has added a new intro- duction and five new chapters bring- In researching the book, he traveled ing the book up to date and looking 7,000 miles, to cities and small towns toward the future. from Virginia to Texas, interviewing "The Jews of the South have found Eastern European-born old-age horne their poet laureate," Israeli statesman residents, who had turned their ped- Abba Eban has said of Evans. A for-. dling trade into department stores; mer aide and speechwriter in the Hadassah activists who knew his Lyndon Johnson White House, he is grandmother, founder of the first Southern branch in 1919, and his Sandee Brawarsky is a New York- mother, who organized chapters based book critic.