*age! bed' Featuring ROSE GUTTMAN'S EAT IN OR DELIVERY TRADITIONAL JEWISH HOME COOKING! AVAILABLE I TRY ROSE'S PICKLED TROUT, GEFILTE FISH & CABBAGE SOUP I CARRY OUT OUR 1 GREAT r DAIRY I DELI TRAYS Special to The Jewish News HOMEMADE FARFEL I WITH COUPON ONLY L THE PLACE FOR SMOKED FISH & HANDCUT BELLY LOX West Bloomfield ROB HUBERMAN GET I LB. OF ROSE'S SPECIALLY PREPARED 10 Person Minimum 6088 W. MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. On The Bookshelf BUY I LB. OF WILNO KOSHER INCLUDING I ROSE'S HOMEMADE SOUR CREAM NUT CAKE Expires 12-3-98 4i1 1 SOFT SALAMI AND I L 31 11 31 i ack Engelhard's novel Indecent Proposal was an international bestseller that spawned the blockbuster movie starring Robert Redford and Demi Moore. His latest novel, The Days of the Bit- ter End (Buy Books on the Web.com ; $15.95), is the story of the rise and fall of Cliff Harris, who emerges from obscurity to become America's most pop- ular comedian. Cliff is a superb imper- sonator who does John F. Kennedy so well that Jackie can hardly tell the dif- ference. His life, like the lives of so many others, changes on Nov. 22, 1963. Rich in historical relevance, The Days of the Bitter End unfolds through the eyes of Harris and three of his friends. Ben Jaffa, 23, a sur- vivor of the Holocaust, is the doorman at a popular Greenwich Village club; Richie Bell, a wealthy, 21-year-old who could have gone to Harvard, dreams of becoming a folk singer like Bob Dylan; and 19-year-old Louise Carmen is the girl who loves them both. As the action moves into the Viet- nam era, Jaffa is the only one who can't understand the discontent of American youth so prevalent during the '60s. "To him, America is a picnic and Americans just don't know it," says Engelhard. "It's the contrast between the 'Golden Land' and a continent where people were being slaugh- tered." Engelhard set his novel in Green- wich Village because it was a mecca for the emerging counterculture revo- lution, a gathering place for social activists, folk musicians, political satirists and "American hipdom." At its heart was the Bitter End, a popular nightclub where the young Jack Engelhard, like his character Ben Jaffa, landed a job as the doorman. It was at that time that I decided j mid WITH COUPON ONLY Expires 12-3-98 OUR TRAYS ARE THE BEST IN TOWN! WE GUARANTEE IT! (148) 8514666 FAX: Nostalgic for the days ofJFK.? A new novel by "Indecent Proposal" author Jack Engelhard takes readers back to Camelot. 0) 5698 48 851- ik otulab EXPRESS° Your guests will feel pampered in our spacious, new guest rooms complete with lush terry robes and slippers, triple-sheeted beds, nightly turn-down service and gourmet breakfast buffet — all in our fabulous downtown Birmingham location! Weekend Specials Available Reservations: 248/646-7300 145 Old Woodward (Formerly South Hunter) • Birmingham, MI 48009 SVGLA4CM. • CAL VNArpirre AUTHENTIC SZECHUAN COOKING fresh Seafood • cocktails J--Tome of General Tso's Chicken 'AA() MSG on all dishes • -Vegetarian Dishes 'daily Specials 39450 14 Mile Rd. (corner of Haggerty in the Newberry Square Plaza) (248) 960-7666 Original location: 29215 5 Mile Rd. at Middlebelt-Livonia Rob Huberman is managing editor of the Jewish Times of the South Jersey Seashore. 1 1 /27 1998 100 Detroit Jewish News to become a novelist, being surround- ed by the likes of Lenny Bruce, Bob Dylan, Woody Allen, Bill Cosby and all that creativity," he says. "I knew at the time that someday I would write a novel about those experiences." Also appearing at the club during Engelhard's time there was JFK impres- sionist Vaughn Meader, who was so good that comedian Lenny Bruce once cracked: "If JFK goes, make room for two graves at Arlington." Kennedy's assassination brought the end of Camelot, and Engelhard watched the dejected impres- sionist Meader leave the club and walk down the I The Days of the Bitter End A NOVL'i by jack. Engelhard 111110r of indecent Proposal street throwing and kicking beer cans. As for The Days of the Bitter End, "this was probably the longest novel in progress in history," Engelhard says about its completion nearly 35 years later. He credits a chance meeting with a man named Richie Ornstein with get- ting the lingering novel back on track. Ornstein was one of the few Jewish cops on than Greenwich Village beat in '63. "He gave me so much inside info r-