;no 041 , 4 On The Bookshelf The death of author Alfred Kazin marks the passing of a giant man of letters. SAN DEE BRAWARSKY Special to The Jewish News I is pleased to announce the 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, BarlBat Mitzvah, Anniversary or any special occasion, The Sheik would love to serve you. Open for Cinch and Dinner 7 -Days 7/24 1998 84 Detroit Jewish News 248-865-0000 Sox: 248- 865 - 0020 memoirs, including New York Jew. His latest book, God and the American Writer, was published last year. While writing, he taught at many universities here and abroad. "He was a unique figure among New York Jewish intellectuals," Morris Dickstein, a critic and colleague at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, comments. "Early on, he was strongly -interested . in American culture when others were n his last weeks of life, Alfred Kazin was still reading with pas- sion, discussing books with friends who'd visit in the hospi- tal, thinking about the book he still wanted to write. The author of A Walker in the City, an evocation of his Jewish Brooklyn childhood, could no longer walk, but his mind was ever curious. His silence will be deeply felt. The author of 13 nonfiction books and editor of 10 literary col- lections, Kazin died of cancer last month, on his 83rd birth- day. Born to . Russian immi- grant parents — his father was a house painter and his mother a dressmaker — in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, the distinguished lit- erary critic had a career spanning more than 60 years. Kazin's prose was direct and penetrating, a delight to read and, as many col- leagues and friends Alfred Kazin: A unique figure among Jewish intellectuals. have commented, more interested in Europe, and he was awesome in its breadth. His prime interested in hisJewish background - subjects were literature and his own when other intellectuals looked toward life. He kept a daily journal and con- the mainstream." Kazin's daughter tinued to publish frequent reviews and Cathrael, a lawyer and former profes- essays. In 1934, while a student at sor of English who moved to City College, Kazin began writing for Jerusalem two years ago, describes him the New York Times Book Review. His as "the last of this great line of men of first book, On Native Grounds, about letters. There is no one with his huge- American literature, was published in ness of vision." 1942 and remains in print. What made his criticism special, Other books include works of criti- according to Dickstein, was his cism like An American Procession and