Arts & Entertainment ll On The Bookshelf Le i Special menu for the cost and calorie-conscious. This menu is not available after 5 p.m. on Saturdays, `What You Owe Me' For her latest novel, African American or with any other specials (coupons) or during the month of December. All entrees served with Soup or Salad and S•a•hetti BEEF SHISH KABOB OSSO BUCCO Veal Shank slowly marinated in a seasoned vegetable sauce served over rice. $993 Skewered cubes of Tenderloin, fresh peppers and onions served over a bed of spanish rice. s(195 author draws from her experiences growing up in a Jewish neighborhood. BUTTERFLY PASTA MANDARIN SPINACH SALAD FRAN HELLER Finely sliced boneless breast of chicken lightly sauteed in olive oil with garlic, peppers and basil tossed with tarfalla pasta. Fresh spinach, mandarin oranges and pine nuts ladled with our raspberry vinaigrette dressing. Special to the Jewish News I $995 SANDWICHES Sliced beef tenderloin sandwich covered in our famous "ZIP" sauce. 5950 And many more delicious dishes! Our regular menu is also available. - 248-373-4440 Call us for details and reservations 855 Opdyke Road (Across from the Silverdome) Serving memorable Italian lunches and dinners since 1939 Monday - Thursday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. • Friday 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. • Sunday 12 noon to 9 p.m. • Excellent choices for lunch specials. aj f HONG HUA t- if A yz- FINE CHINESE DINING h 27925 • We cater parties • Cliff certificates available ()RCIIARD LAKI. ROAD • FAliMI\GION Huts 248-489-2280 twits: I I .XXI — MID\ Rail, Si X t.\ \NS X XVI I k Special C1iinese, AniericAn Er J a panese Buffet All YON Call Eat elk r L 8/31 2001 68 d ENTIRE oi s " FOOD OFF BILL a , Expires 9130101 • I coupon per table Not good with any other coupon 1 j 29205 Orchard Lake Road (next to Staples • 248-553-8880 • Fax: 248-553-8708 Open Hours: Mon-Thurs 11 am-10 pm; Fri-Sat I I am-1 I pm; Sunday 12 noon-10 pm her prospects of going to college were non-existent, even though she was a straight-A student. It was a perceptive Jewish teacher who made the future social worker switch from a commercial program to an academic one in high school, and helped her secure a full scholarship to the University of Pennsylvania in the 1930s. "My mother credits that woman for changing her life and for changing the family history," says Campbell. n African-American author Bebe Moore Campbell's fourth novel, What You Owe Me, Gilda Rosenstein, a Holocaust sur- vivor, and Hosanna Clark, a black woman, first meet as maids in a Los Angeles hotel in 1948. The two become friends and eventually busi- ness partners, but a bitter betrayal leaves a legacy of retri- bution to the next gen- eration — as well as the challenge of reconcilia- tion. Campbell, best-selling author of Brothers and Sisters and Singing in the Comeback Choir, is a compelling storyteller. Even though real life is never as tidy as her fic- tion, one of the book's major strengths is the evenhandedness with which she writes not only from the black point of view but the white and Jewish per- spective. That perspective, she says, in a telephone interview from her vaca- Campbell credits Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison as her greatest writer role model "She symbolized what tion home on Martha's Vineyard, was honed by I wanted to do and that it was possible." growing up, from age 10, in a predominately In the early 1970s, Campbell, a Jewish Philadelphia neighborhood, graduate of the University Of where her family moved from a mostly Pittsburgh, took part in an exchange black neighborhood in 1960. program. The father of her Brazilian on the "Our house 'had a mezuzah host family was a Holocaust survivor. back door," recalls Campbell, 51, and Campbell saw the numbers tattooed the Baptist church where her grand- on his arm and heard the story of his mother worshiped was a former syna- survival and emigration after libera- gogue. A cousin who lived with the tion. It was that experience that led to family was asked by their Orthodox the creation of the Jewish protagonist neighbors to turn the lights on and off in her novel. during Shabbat. Though none of the book's charac- Campbell walked to the local junior ters and events is true, the author's high school with a Jewish girl, until sensitivity toward the Jewish experi- the girl's family — like most of the ence and the black experience informs other Jewish families in the area — throughout. "It was clear to me," she eventually moved out of the neighbor- has stated, "that the struggles between hood. blacks and Jews were similar enough The author's mother, one of three to make the two groups allies and yet daughters of a single parent who different enough to create enmity.- worked in domestic service, thought