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August 27, 1999 - Image 100

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-08-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

On The Bookshelf

•zu

tik

li

ch • Dinner • C"

BRUNCH BUFFET:

Sundays 11:00 - 2:00

Adults $16.95
Children 642 $1/yr. 4 ° Children 5 and Under FREE

LUNCH:

Mon. - Thurs. 11:00 - 2:00

ood Reads

DINNER:

Sun. - Thurs. 5:00 9:00

7295 Orchard Lake Road
West Bloomfield, Michigan • Robins Nest Plaza

248-932-8934

Tth: 'Tin:es of

Reservations Suggested

VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT www.ladifference.corn

Excellent Thai Food As You Like It ... Extra Mild, Mild, Medium, Spicy and Extra Spicy

S AN D EE BRAWARSKY
Special to the Jewish News

L

Rated *** by Detroit News

Lunch Specials

from ND

50

I I :00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

includes
soup &
rice

eatterdut 5 egtetin# evadable • eocktaiL6 6etved

Hours: Mon.-Thurs., I I a.m.-10 p.m., Fri & Sat. I I a.m.-1 I p.m., Sun. 12-9 p.m.

6635 Orchard Lake Road at Maple • Old Orchard Shopping Center • 626.6313

CATERING

WE CAN DO
SOMETHING
FABULOUS
FOR THAT
SPECIAL
EVENT
DELIVERY
SERVICE
AVAILABLE

8/27

A Little Bit Of New York
Right Here In Bloomfield Hills

LET US TAKE
CARE OF
THE FOOD!
HOME OR
OFFICE,
ANY
OCCASIONS,
SHIVAS,
NO
NOTICE
NEEDED!

6646 Telegraph at Maple • Bloomfield Plaza • 248-932-0800

AI

1999
100 Detroit Jewish News

Lik

ifh? 'arm

Illr

hen I was not listening to
the Tigers or playing
baseball or basketball
myself, I was reading,"
Max Apple writes in "The American
Bakery," a story about his emerging
love of language and the Detroit bakery
where his grandfather — well known
from Apple's memoir Roommates and
the film based on it — worked. While
growing up, Apple would visit the bak-
ery most afternoons for a snack and
then head to the nearby public library.
"In the high-ceilinged room, I sat
at a mahogany table. Across the street,
my grandpa in the heat of the ovens
was yelling at Joe Post in Polish and at
Philip Allen in Yiddish; here the
librarians whispered in English and
decorated me with ribbons like a war
hero, jut because I loved to read. The
books all in order, the smiling ladies
to approve me, the smooth tables,
even the maps on the wall seemed per-
fect to me. The marble floors of that
library were the stones of heaven, my

Stock up on
some good
books
for summer's
last holiday
weekend.

Harvard and my Yale, my refuge in
the English language."
"The American Bakery" is included
in Here I Am: Contemporary Jewish
Stories fi-om Around the World (Jewish
Publication Society). It is one of the
titles recommended below for reading
on the last long holiday weekend of
summer — whether perched in an air
conditioned library, lounging at the
beach or poolside, squeezed into an air-
plane seat or suspended in a hammock.

Novels: Hardcover

• Four Mothers by Shifra Horn (St.
Martin's), a first novel that was a best-
seller in Israel, is a compelling multi-
generational saga set in Jerusalem, nar-
rated in the style of magical realism.
• Surrender; Dorothy by Meg
Wolitzer (Scribner) is the story of a
group of 20- and 30-something friends
— including a celebrated playwright
whose hit play is about Jewish life on
Mars — who deal with issues of friend-
ship, parents, death and growing up.
• The Paris Years of Rosie Kamin
by Richard Teleky (Steerforth) is a first
novel about an American Jewish

ti

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