1824 west 14 m ile road, royal oak, michigan 48 073 248- 655- 5 000 www. boocoo. com unique private rooms suitable for engagement parties, bridal showers, they're hot 3 course dinner $15.95 M - F, 3 - 6pm happy hour F, 4 - 7pm 00000 country european cuisine "Restaurant of the Year" -Hour Detroit magazine 2004 990760 Featuring Gourmet Oriental Cuisine Excellent Lunch Complete Menu Carryout • Midnight Gift Certificates • Available We Cater To Private 27925 Orchard Lake Road, north of 12 Mile • Farmington Hills 248.489.2280 906150 Restaurant Italian Cuisine 248.476.0044 Ruth not valid with any other offer 6/16 2005 50 SAND EE B RAWARS KY he History of Love is the name of a book within Nicole Krauss' remarkable new novel of the same name, The History of Love (Norton; $23.95). The inner novel has had a life of its own. Written in Yiddish in Poland and thought to be lost, translated into Spanish in Buenos Aires, unbeknownst to the author, and later into English in New York, it drew on real love and also inspired love, fired up lives. If this were a love letter rather than a novel, it would be a chain letter, broken but ultimately reconnected. Krauss visits Borders in Ann Arbor on Friday, June 17, to share her novel with readers. The theme of memory is central to the work of Nicole Krauss. Interlocking Stories Parties if your name is Nicole Krauss' novel-within-a-novel centers on a retired locksmith who loses his first love — and manuscript. T 9ivititeis/ cliatt 7;0/ `A wonderful adventure in fine dining" - Danny Raskin For the month of June 10%Off your entire bill Unlocking Emotions Ann Arbor FINE CHINESE DINING Selections 7 Days a Week I I a.m.- On The Bookshelf Special to the Jewish News 1AONG H u4 and Dinner Arts & Entertainment "Any Event" Catering • Banquet Room Available 600 Off Buy any dinner entree and receive '6" off the second dinner entree Salads, pizza, sandwiches and ribs for 2 excluded. Oue coupon per table Expires: June 26, 2005 Farmington Hills • Corner of Grand River & Haggerty Road Auburn Hills • 1 1 , miles south of the Palace of Auburn Hills i Leo Gursky, a retired locksmith liv- ing alone in New York City, who makes a daily commotion in some public place to be sure that he doesn't die without being noticed, is the unlikely romantic who's the original author of The History of Love. He wrote it while living in Poland, when he was very much in love with a girl named Alma. Jews weren't safe in their town of Slonim, and he lost Alma, who left for America before he did, and he gave the manuscript to a friend for safekeeping. Years later, at age 57, Gursky, after suffering a heart attack, cur- tails his work. He begins a new book, writing daily. He muses: "At times, I believed that the last page of my book and the last page of my life were one and the same, that when my book ended, I'd end, a great wind would sweep through my rooms carrying the pages away, and when the air cleared of all those fluttering white sheets the room would be silent, the chair where I sat would be empty." Gursky is a man whose suit does- n't quite fit, who's always late ("I've always arrived too late for my life"). A magnet for small mishaps at inopportune times, he's cranky and lonely, although still a poetic observer. "Story of my life: I was a locksmith. I could unlock every door in the city. And yet I couldn't unlock anything I wanted to unlock." Also living in New York is a young girl named Alma, who