4. Arts & Entertainiwk On The Bookshdf 1 CONEY ISLAND Greek and American Cuisine OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 154 S. Woodward, Birmingham (248) 540-8780 Halsted Village (37580 W. 12 Mile Rd.) Farmington Hills (248) 553-2360 Candle # 4 For The Sports Fan Candle # 5 For The Cartoon Collector Candle # 6 For The History Hound Pray Ball! The Spiritual Insights of a Jewish Sports Fan, by Rabbi James Gordon (Gefen Publishing; $21.95), is a collection of essays in which the author, a Chicago-based attorney/rabbi, connects The New Yorker 75th Anniversary Cartoon Collection, edited by Bob Mankoff (Pocket Books; $40), offers 707 of the best cartoons from the entire history one of America's most celebrated magazines. Over the years., there have been some 62,000 cartoons on the pages of The New Yorker and each in their own way has pro- vided a fascinating record of American history, life, love, busi- ness and society. For this collec- tion, Mankoff, the current car- toon editor of The New Yorker, reviewed all of the magazine's car- toons, asked for advice from other cartoonists and editors, and also included the choices of 30,000 readers who registered at The New Yorker's cartoon site, www.cartoonbank.com . The result is a look back at the gems of some of the most gifted comic artists of 20th-century America, including Peter Arno, Charles Addams, Mary Petty, Roz Chast, William Steig, Jack Ziegler A People Apart: The Jews in Europe 1789-1939, by David Vital (Oxford Press; $45), a distinguished Tel Aviv University political scientist and histori- an, is billed as the first full-length study to examine the history of the Jews on the entire European continent. The author, in more than 900 pages, documents the struggle of the Jewish people to establish a place for itself within a political and social environ- 6527 Telegraph Rd. Corner of Maple (15 Mile) Bloomfield Township (248) 646-8568 4763 Haggerty Rd. at Pontiac Trail West Wind Village Shopping Center West Bloomfield (248) 669-2295 841 East Big Beaver, Troy (248) 680-0094 SOUTHFIELD SOUVLAKI CONEY ISLAND Nine Mile & Greenfield 15647 West Nine Mile, Southfield (248) 569-5229 FARMINGTON SOUVLAKI CONEY ISLAND Between 13 & 14 on Orchard Lake Road 30985 Orchard Lake Rd. Farmington Hills (248) 626-9732 UPTOWN PARTHENON 4301 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield (248) 538-6000 HERCULES FAMILY RESTAURANT 33292 West 12 Mile Farmington Hills (248) 489-9777 Serving whitefish, Iamb shank, pastitsio and mousaka F I - I i 12/3 1999 milksop mpg mit ma net um ion on 0 Entire Bill not to go with any other offer I with coupon I Expires 12/30/99 i is me Ism um on no Ion No-`iris wit a Rabbi James Gordon Fore.vord by Lou 1Veisbach & Leigh Steinberg sports with Jewish identity "An involvement in sports, both as a spectator and partici- pant, can provide a deeper inner meaning into our lives," writes Gordon in the book's introduc- tion. "For me, sports has empha- sized such important traditional Jewish lessons as cooperation (team play), respect (sportsman- ship), hard work and understand- ing our own limitations." Pray Ball! is comprised of a series of spiritual messages pertain- ing to eight sports-related topics: baseball, basketball, the Olympics, hockey, football, golf, sports agency, and leaders and heroes. The book explores such ques- tions as: What do the "professional" careers of Michael Jordan and Moses have in common? How does the competition between home run sluggers Mark MaGwire and Sammy Sosa illustrate proper Jewish competition? How do Cal Ripken Jr. and Jewish tradition promote the importance of passion? Gordon, who comes from a long line of rabbis, received a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Michigan and is the longest-serving rabbi in the history of Congregation B'nai Shalom in Buffalo Grove, Ill. • • - • "-- ; t.*:, • . . . . . • and many more. Mankoff, a native New Yorker, quit his graduate school program in psychology to begin his career and sold his first cartoon to The New Yorker in 1977. ment, which, despite the liberties granted in some countries, was increasingly hostile. He explores the clashes within Jewish communities between those who sought to confine Jews to their tradi- tional quietism, and those who wished to break free and strike out for some political self-determination and autonomy. The modern history of the Jews, he argues, up until the destruction of the Holocaust, was of their own making — at times by their autonomous action and choice, at others by inaction and default. The London-born author, who grew up in Palestine and the United States, held appointments in Israeli govern- ment service during the 1950s and '60s but switched to an academic career. He served as the Nahum Goldmann Professor of Diplomacy at Tel Aviv University from 1977-1995. Candle # 7 For The Children Roman Vishniac: Children of a Vanished World, edited by Mara Vishniac Kohn and Miriam Hartman Flacks (University of California Press;