Book Fair Co-Chairpersons Amy Hammer and Gail Fisher: "We are like a well-oiled machine," says Hammer. You're Being Paged! Welcome to the JCC's annual Book Fair, where you can jump into a magical kingdom of learning, taste gefilte fish like your grandmother made, hear about an ancient kingdom of red-haired Jews or peek into the crazy world of women's magazines. Elizabeth Applebaum Special to the Jewish News T he opening-night speaker could not have been nicer, and he was funny and fascinating. Just one thing. He didn't have a speech. "I don't talk," he said. Amy Hammer turned to him. "Nothing? Not even a DVD with out-takes?" "No:' he told her. "People can just ask me questions!' There's an emotion that can consume you as quickly as a military jet cutting through the air and with the feroc- ity of a stampede of wildebeest. It's called terror; and Amy Hammer, co-chairperson of the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit's Annual Jewish Book Fair, was experiencing it that very moment. Here she was with the opening-night speaker, the one scheduled to appear before more than 1,000 people the next day; and he had "nothing to say." She called his publicist. "He has got to present some- thing," she said. That was the trick."0K," the man said the next day. "I'll talk." (The event turned out quite well.) Now in its 56th year, and running this year Nov. 7-18 at the West Bloomfield and Oak Park Jewish Community Centers, the JCC's Jewish Book Fair began as the dream of then-JCC Director Irwin Shaw, who wanted to "get Jewish books into Jewish homes:' which remains the unofficial mission statement of Book Fair to this day. It started small. Now it's the largest in the country. What keeps it going are dozens of volunteers, JCC staff and two women, the Book Fair chairpersons, Gail Fisher and Amy Hammer. "We are like a well-oiled machine and enjoy each other immensely, even after four intense years together [chair- ing the event]," Hammer says. "We complement each other perfectly, both in our interests and responsibilities." Three weeks before Book Fair is set to open the two are in a windowless room ("the dungeon:' they call it) in the West Bloomfield JCC, surrounded by box after box of books, papers, tables, a computer and phones as they prepare the more than 10,000 books that will be for sale, with all profits going to JCC programs. A little problem today: One publisher has no record of receiving a request for books. Of course, when you've dealt with an opening-night speaker who has no speech and another guest who decid- Book Fair on page B5 October 25 0 2007 B1