Wonder Of Wonders, Miracle Of Miracles Get ready for Chanukah with a great new book about funny families, flying lathes and UFOs. ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM AppleTree Editor The Flying Latke by Arthur Yorinks with art by William Steig (Simon & Schuster; $6.99). Chanukah is all about miracles. Consider The Flying Latke one of them. This is the funni- est, most original and most Jewish children's book that has come out in years. It has just been published in paperback and you should buy it now, and never, ever let anyone borrow it. Not even your best friend. Not even your mother. The story is about a boy and his odd, but lovable family. The characters are depicted by pho- tographs of real-life actors, including John Turturro, set against a background drawn by the incomparable William Steig (author of the wonder- ful children's tale Dr. DeSoto, among others), who also stars as the newscaster. As the story begins, the author introduces you to his family, where "every day it was something else. This one didn't get along with that one. Someone wasn't speaking to someone else. The fights. The arguments. You shouldn't know from it." It's Chanukah, and the whole family is there: "You know, Uncle Izzy, Aunt Sadie, Uncle Shecky, Aunt Etta, Aunt Esther, Uncle Al, Aunt Shirley and, oh yeah, all my cousins: Nettie, Lettie, Howard, Sy, Sidney, Sol, Wolfie, Murray, Marvin, Tillie, Roberta, Pauline and Bob." Since "my mother doesn't believe in appetizers," when dinner is served everyone comes running in to eat. At the same time, an argu- ment is brewing. Izzy saw a car; he swears it was a Ford. Uncle Shecky insists it was a Buick. Izzy picks up a salad and drops it on Shecky's head. Seconds later, "The food flew ... In no time, there was nothing left. Nothing but a few latkes ..." Izzy picks up one of the last latkes, the largest, and it flies out the window. Then the family turns on the TV, and: "We interrupt this program to give you a news bulletin. A UFO has just been spotted flying over the New Jersey Turnpike." Yes, it's the latke. Rest assured there's a happy. ending, but I won't give it away here. It's too much fun. Books like The Flying Latke come along once in a blue moon (which, incidentally, is one place we get to see the fly- ing latke). Don't miss your chance to buy it now. Marven of the Great North Woods by Karthryn Lasky, with illustrations by Kevin Hawkes (Voyager Books; $7). This is a true story, written by the daughter of. Marven Las who, in 1918, was sent to work in a logging camp to keep him safe from the influenza epidem- ic in his hometown of Duluth, Minn. The child of immigrants from Russia, Marven was 10 when he went to live with the :\ loggers, where he had to learn not only how to manage with- out his family, and how to \\ • work for a living, but how to speak another language (the loggers all speak French). Marven of the Great North Woods is a National Jewish Book Council winner; the •N, illustrations must have been the driving force behind this deci- sion. The paintings are glori- ous. You will feel like you're right there at the logging camp I — in the cold, in the vastness of it. The pictures are wonder- ful. The story is interesting enough. You won't be surprised a 10/11 2002 %ft 107