INSIDE: Summer Festival In Ann Arbor 70 `Swing' Time At The Fox 76 Eric Bloom Of Blue Oyster Cult 80 Young author Jonathan Safran Foer burst on the literary scene this year with a multi-layered novel based on his search for his Ukrainian roots. Now, "Everything Is Illuminated" is garnering comparisons to the works of the most renowned Jewish writers of the last century. JOURNEY Imagination DIANE COLE Special to the Jewish News ust 25, author Jonathan Safran Foer gives new meaning to the phrase tal- ent to burn. In his extraordinary first novel, Everything Is Illuminated, fire and light appear everywhere, and especially in the Polish-Ukrainian shtetl of Trachimbrod, the tiny village whose fan- tastical history Foer hypnotically dramatizes. There, festive boats sparked by fireworks sail along the deceptively quiet River Brod. Bucolic fields, are showered by lightning storms. Ultimately, a satanic firestorm, ignited y Nazi invaders, obliterates the town so thor- oughly that its name disappears from memory. Or almost. More than half a century after Trachimbrod's destruction by Hitler's army, a young Jewish-American writer "Everything named Jonathan Safran Foer Is Illuminated" reverses the journey taken by has been touted as his grandparents, and embarks "the century's first on a search for the obscure vil- great American lage from which they nearly Jewish novel:" failed to escape. His only clues to its location are a long out- dated map and a 50-year old photograph of a young woman. She may or may not be named Augustine; she may or may not have saved his grandfather's life; she may or may not still live in the area, or, for that matter, still be living. So far, the novel is based on fact. The sum- mer after his junior year at Princeton — where he majored in philosophy, became interested in art history and racked up cre- ative writing prizes — the real Jonathan Safran Foer, a native of Washington, D.C., did travel to the Ukraine. Like the fictional Foer, he was seeking the woman who, according to family lore, had res- cued his maternal grandfather from the Nazis. However, unlike his fictional namesake, the author, whose short stories have been published in the literary journals Paris Review and Connections, found no trace of anyone or any- thing connected to the tragedy of Trachimbrod. After five days of aimless travel through the bleakest parts of the Ukraine, he ended up in Prague, where he had intended to spend the summer writing the true story of his travels. IMAGINATION on page 74