The Neuman Family and Staff of On The Bookshelf STAR DELI IRIT Michigan's Finest Deli Carry-Out Acclaimed As One Of America's Best Carry-Out Only Delicatessens 24555 W. 12 Mile 352-7377 Wish Their Friends and Customers A VERY HEALTHY AND HAPPY NEW YEAR May Our Prayers Be Answered For Peace On Earth YoyeAheink ji awl eeez.P'' Tell her in a Jewish News Classified ad. 3 Lines for Vir10_ 4 weeks kikffi 9/29 2000 11,54 g 1•800354•5959I n SANDEE BRAWARS KY Special to the Jewish News 0 thers have written fic- tion about post-immi- grant Jewish families, about coming-of-age and assimilation, but Alice Lichtenstein's impressive debut novel, The Genius of the World (Zoland Books; $13), is decidedly different in its spiritual dimensions. This is a soulful novel, chronicling inner as well as outward journeys, exploring the nature of genius, fami- ly ties, the possibility of choosing one's roots. It's The Jew in the Lotus — Rodger Kamenetz's lively non-fic- tional exploration of the connections between Judaism and Buddhism — meets the Jewish family novel. In an interview, the author admits to some discomfort with the label of spiritual novel — "there's no New Age music playing in the back- ground," she says, but explains that she has long been interested in exis- God comes up in unexpected places in Alice Lichtenstein's first novel, "The Genius of the World." tential questions of "faith vs. reason, religion vs. science, destiny vs. free will." The three generations in this novel grapple with those questions. The novel is told from different perspectives, shifting in different chapters between the points of view of Ira Stein, his sister Phoebe and his grandfather Abbey, a Nobel prize- winning physicist and the family patriarch. Playing supporting roles are Ira's parents and younger sister Molly, part of this educated, cul- tured Jewish family with few signs of being rooted in tradition. Among the Steins, Abbey is the "genius of the world," but Ira too has great passion and the ability from a very early age to see what others don't — his is a kind of spiritual genius. Misunderstood by teachers who don't perceive his gifts, Ira later experiments with drugs and rebels against the establish- ment. From a child- hood that is on one level troubled and on another level deeply connected to some- thing larger, he finds meaning in Buddhism when he escapes to San Francisco and meets a band of Buddhists. Invited to join their communal home, he takes the name Milarepa and becomes a Buddhist monk. "You're a wan- dering Jew, searching for a path," his guru tells him. "There's a spiritual energy in Jews. Why do you think you scratch a