Arts & Entertainment PAUL KOHN'S Mixed Media La Difference LUNCH DINNER COCKTAILS lvn Gourmet Cuisine featuring Fresh Fish, Pasta and Vegetarian Entrees Sunday Brunch **** I Four Star Rating by Sylvia Rector at the Detroit Free Press Carry-out and Catering also available 6 i:d Farmington Rd. - La Difference 1 (located in the , --4 - 2 0 Robin's Nest Shopping Plaza .. 2 14 Mile Road ° '4' 72 95 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield, Michigan 48322 Robins Nest Shopping Plaza 248-932-8934 Reservations Suggested THE GALLERY RESTAURANT Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance I BREAKFAST LUNCH > DINNER OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 BORDERS BOOKS, MUSIC, VtDEO, AHD A CAFE. www.borders.com Bangkok Sala Cafe a • •• ■ ••••••• MIS IMO THAI CUISINE 30995 Orchard Lake. Rd. Farmington Hills 48334 (248) 737-0110 Buy One Lunch or Dinner & Get a Second for 50% OFF One per customer • Expires 8/15/00 27903 Orchard Lake Rd. (NW corner of 12 Mile) Farmington Hills (248) 553-4220 7/2 1 2000 84 Open 7 days a week Mon-Sat 11 am - 10 pm Sunday 4 pm - 9:30 pm eviews Southern Exposure Also featuring Maple Road New grandfather Moise, making the journey to America, is To be a Jew in rolled for his passage money America is to be an out- in a Hamburg whorehouse sider. For Edward the night before he is set to Cohen, that was triply sail, and has to work a year true. in a German factory to earn He stood apart from it back. He finally arrives in the church picnics and America and joins his broth- Christmas parties that er, Lazar, who has ended up make up so much of the in Mississippi for reasons fabric of gentile life. He mysterious. grew up in the 1950s as "He might have part of a Jewish family in heard that a living Jackson, Miss., a teenage Author Edward could be made," Village Voice subscriber Cohen: A portrait Cohen writes. "Or adrift in a Moon Pie of cultural perhaps he wasn't world of football worship contradiction. used to, comfort- and unchallenged race able in, a totally hatred. And, finally, he Jewish world. Romania was not a cen- was a writer, whose keen eye missed ter of Jewish learning. It was a hinter- very little and who early on realized land, like Mississippi." that his unusual upbringing offered That discomfort with Jewishness him an opportunity to see life in a points to a fourth facet of Cohen's dia- clear, hard light. mond-like telling of his outsider's life. "One can hardly hail from two As his grandparents make the progres- more historically losing causes than sion from itinerant peddlers to estab- the South and Judaism," he writes in lished businessmen, with a clothing the introduction to his warm, funny store on Capitol Street, their relation- and poignant memoir, The Peddler's ship with their own religion becomes Grandson (University Press of distant, strained, problematic. Mississippi: $15). All the assimilating pressures affect- "Both my cultures have long, tragic ing non-Orthodox Jews are felt full pasts, and not one jot of it has been force in Jackson, where kosher food, forgotten. If my Jewishness and my forinstance, is unavailable and arriv- southernness meant that I would have ing Jews are led away from their reli- no home, no resting spot, I would at gion by the nose. least have a singular view of the shore." "In Jackson, keeping kosher seemed The view lingers lovingly on his as bizarre and antiquated as sacrificing family, but never with the rosy gloss a goat on a mountain," he writes. "As that destroys so many memoirs. His the Hormel sugar-cured bacon sizzled Local Authors Sought The Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit is seeking local authors to participate in the 49th annual Jewish Book Fair, which will take place Saturday, Nov. 4, through Sunday, Nov. 12, 2000. Local authors who are Jewish or have written a book of Jewish content are invited to participate in the fourth local author fair, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 5. Book Fair patrons will have the opportunity to meet the authors and purchase autographed copies of their books. Books must be published between November 1999 and November 2000. Deadline for submissions is Thursday, Aug. 31. . For more information, contact Elaine Schonberger, (248) 661-7648. Haven' Miniseries The story of 1,000 Jewish refugees plucked from Europe in the midst of World War II and transported to safety in the United States is being filmed as a four-hour miniseries for CBS Television. Haven, based on the book of the same title by journalist Ruth Gruber, features Natasha Richardson, Anne Bancroft, Martin Landau and Hal Holbrook, and is scheduled for broad- cast in February. Gruber, then a young assistant to U.S. Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes, wrangled an assign- ment to escort the refugees in their