Nk. frontation, surprising twists, a breathtaking ending. The Tattooed Girl is a quick read, a manageable 307 pages, but Oates, like Philip Roth, is too gifted to merely tell a story. The erudite Seigl offers philosophy. We reflect on comments such as Primo Levi's "So long as we are human, we must ask." Oates is noted for her architecturally structured work. The Tattooed Girl reflects this craftsmanship. The first chapter is four sentences. A single one- word sentence speaks volumes: 'Ashamed." This gifted writer enthralls. — Edith Broida FAMILY HISTORY By Dani Shapiro (Knopf; 288 pp.; $23) fter reading the first few pages of Dani Shapiro's newest book, Family History, you know something terrible and life-changing has happened to Rachel Jensen and her family. What you don't know is that you soon will be reading far into the night, willing to give up sleep in order to find out what has happened and how it all turns out. The story is told in flashbacks, and the narrative flows smoothly between past and present as the reader is drawn into the lives of this once-idyllic fami- ly that is now on the edge of disinte- grating. The Jensens' own family history begins when Rachel, a Jewish girl from New York who aspires to a career in art restoration, falls in love with Ned Jensen, an idealistic artist whose parents are successful "WASP- y" New England real estate develop- ers, selling "McMansions" to wealthy young professionals in country club subdivisions with street names like "Arthur Way" and "Edward Drive." Despite their differences, and the disapproval of Rachel's critical and overbearing mother, Rachel and Ned are happy, even though Ned has yet to make it big in the New York art world, and Rachel's career has not taken off as rapidly as she had hoped. They take pride and pleasure in their daughter, Kate, and in their ordi- nary yet contented domestic life, until A the day Kate returns from summer camp, sullen and uncommunicative, with orange-yellow hair, a tattoo and a navel ring. Rachel tries to ignore her growing feelings of unease until Kate, in a moment of anger and fear, sets into motion a series of events that escalate like a raging wildfire. And, even after the flames are reduced to smoldering ashes, the damage is far-reaching and seemingly beyond repair. Shapiro writes insightfully about how easy it is to take life for granted, until it begins to dissolve before our eyes: "I had no idea my life was easy. We didn't have enough money, or space, or hours in the day. The boiler had a leak; the dog needed a bath. Little things got the better of me. Now, all that seems absurd." She speaks to every parent's deepest fears: that we can try our best to be good parents and protect our children, and things can still go terribly wrong. When the story ends, what finally INNIS . . N a A YOUR MOUTH IS LOVELY and his new wife, Tsila, Miriam gradu- ally learns that nearly everyone in this insular world knows more about her and her family's history than she. aught up in the Stepmother Tsila, considered "sour" swirl of history by the town, actually is a talented that led to the businesswoman — a dressmaker — 1905 Russian and the strength of her family. Revolution is Miriam, Unsentimental about life, the educa- a sensitive young tion Tsila gives Miriam includes how woman languishing in to stand up to the yentas (gossips). a Siberian prison for Times of change are on the way, murder. Miriam writes to the daugh- however, throwing off religious tradi- ter who was taken from her at birth, tions and social distinctions, making and will never know her, in Nancy revolutionaries out of daughters and Richler's encompassing second novel, sons no longer willing to conform. Your Mouth Is Lovely. Girls opposed to their father's choice Lonely Miriam, rejected by her sui- of husband simply run away. Couples cidal mother and abandoned by her live together unmarried in bigger father, lives in a small Jewish village in cities. Young people create secret Belarus as an outcast. It is during the "study groups" to plan political-actions last years of Imperial Russia, when or make bombs in their haste to hurry Jews were confined to a territory called along a new society. the Pale of Settlement. Richter vividly When Miriam gets to move beyond re-creates the complexity of what the confines of her shtetl to Kiev, she is would seem to be a simple, homoge- exhilarated with her freedom. Then events and transitory people conspire to take it away. Miriam, never especially political, finds herself making pickups and deliveries of guns, dynamite and other munitions, caught up in the pulse of the revolution. Later, in the harshness of her Siberian exile, Miriam yet dreams sweetly of a girl ice skating in a lovely blue coat, and feels comforted knowing that Hayya is safe and loved. The promise embedded in this child of the third generation makes all the misery that's passed before endurable for Miriam — and for us, who have come to care very much for her. This is a richly detailed, engrossing book with memorable, and sometimes very funny, characters. Richter draws us into a lost world that we should miss only in nostalgia. "114114"4" • The reality was quite unkind. — Esther Allweiss Tschirhart By Nancy Richter (Ecco Press; 368 pp.; $25.95) c . ‘.• -11•1101., •• . • • THE DEVIL WORE PRADA emerges is a poignant illustration of strength and survival in the face of unimaginable circumstances, and of the bond of love between parent and child that transcends everything else that has ever mattered. The first I thing I did after finish- ing Family History was to go out in search of another book by Shapiro. I devoured Slow Motion, her autobio- graphical novel, with equal vora- ciousness. I can't think of higher praise for a book or its author. — Ronelle Grier neotisworld, where Jews for genera- tions have worked hard, kept their tra- ditions and remained grindingly poor. But in Miriam's town, the people thrive on superstition; for example, women eat a particular kind of reed to encourage pregnancy. And gossip, though religiously forbidden, is the favorite form of entertainment. As time goes by, Miriam is alarmed to find herself without any secrets in her narrow world. Nearly 7 when she leaves the midwife's crowded house- hold to rejoin her father Aaron Lev By Lauren Weisberger (Doubleday; 360 pp.; $21.95) ashionistas unite. The ulti- mate beach book has arrived. The Devil Wears Prada is as shallow as the shores of Cass Lake. And if the names Manolo •.+:. Blahnik or Jimmy Choo aren't familiar, stop reading now because this roman a clef just won't be your cup of latte. SUMMER READING on page 66 F ; 6/20 2003 65