Arts & Entertainment ON THE COVER Introducing ... Sally Koslow ally Koslow has one goal in mind with Little Pink Slips (G.P. Putnam's Sons; $24.95). "Simply to entertain — to make you laugh and to briefly transport you to a world where the holy trinity means good hair, good shoes and good bags," she says on her Web site, www.sallykoslow.com . The former editor of McCall's, Koslow takes readers through a fun, bumpy, insightful ride through the world of women's magazines in this, her first book. S thought I might like to join a writing workshop (since I had the luxury of severance pay). I have always liked the craft of writing, but as an editor it was only one of many daily tasks. When I found a writing group, I sat down and wrote a fictional account of going, as an editor in chief, to a Chanel sample sale in Manhattan, and the other writers in the group thoroughly enjoyed the piece. It was at that moment that I thought, "Aha, maybe I should take this further and write a novel." 0: What was the exact moment you decided, "I'm going to write a book"? Q: Your protagonist, Magnolia, is convinced of the wisdom in magazine articles. What was the most memorable lesson you learned from a maga- zine article, and what do you believe was the most impor- tant story you ran as editor of McCall's? A: A few years ago, I was — as happens rather often in magazine publishing — abruptly let go from a job as the edi- tor in chief of a magazine. The director of human resources asked me what I thought I would do next. I looked at her strangely, since the pink slip was a shock and I had no reason to have considered Plan B. Yet part of me instantly answered that I A: As editor in chief of McCall's, I'm proudest of our remarkable, life-sav- ing health stories; and if I had to pick just one of them to cite, it would be LITTLE F I NK a report we did on lung who, for example, cancer, which despite is from Fargo, its frequency is rarely N.D., like I am, SHIPS covered in magazines on and Jewish. But account of the money N ov the only thing magazines make from that Bebe Blake cigarette ads. and Rosie have in Beyond the many les- common is that sons I have learned from they are big-heart- magazine health arti- ed, outrageous, cles, I think that I have /4 /I shrewd celebrities 11141 , benefited from stories in who have started magazines on emotional eponymous maga- health. One that comes zines. to mind is a piece I wrote myself for Reader's Digest on how to Q: You've written for maga- be more confident. If you Google my zines, newspapers and now name and the word "confidence," you you have a book. What do you can read it. like best about the writing Q: Many readers have noted the similarities between you and Magnolia, and Bebe and Rosie O'Donnell in Little Pink Slips. Can you give us a hint about how much of the novel is based on fact? A: There's a lot of me in Magnolia, process? A: I love it all! With fiction, I adore turning a phrase, creating characters, telling a story and entertaining read- ers. With journalism, the rewards con- nect to meeting people, learning and educating readers. Please don't make me choose. - Elizabeth Applebaum Introducing Howard Jacobson T he cleverist, funniest, sharp- est writer we have," the Sunday Telegraph says of Howard Jacobson, who describes his new book, Kalooki Nights (Simon and Schuster; $26) as "the most Jewish novel that has ever been written by anybody, anywhere." In Kalooki Nights, Jacobson, who has penned seven works of fiction and four of nonfiction, tells the story of two childhood friends — one who becomes a writer and the other a criminal — and of the persistence of the Holocaust in the minds of Jews. Q: The American Jewish com- munity is outspoken, very much identified; the British Jewish community seems more private. Give me one word that describes Jews in England; then tell me more. A: Timid. You'll notice I didn't say pusillanimous, though I might have. I confess I don't like it — as Jews don't like non-Jews making Jewish jokes B14 October 25 • 2007 — when American Jews say what I've just said about English Jews. But I can say it because I'm one of us and understand why we're the way we are. But it's still our problem that we're so timid. The reason for it goes back to our re-admittance to Britain under Cromwell. We had been thrown out once, and we were afraid it might hap- pen again. So we kept our heads down and hoped they wouldn't notice we were here. We still do. Jews in Britain number less than 300,000, so you could say that for all our timidity, we punch above our weight. Intellectually and artistically we make a big noise for our small number. But we rarely do it noisily as Jews. We want to show that we have blended in, even though we haven't. It is the case that things are just beginning to change. English Jews becoming vibrant? There are signs. Q: You are one of the few writers — or public figures, for that matter — to be so out- spoken on the subject of Israel. Your news- paper columns have called to task the hos- tility the media has shown toward Israel. Were your raised in a Zionist home? I didn't visit Israel and didn't think of visiting Israel until 1990 when I wrote Roots Schmoots. But I remember getting a scare H ja4o 0 4/44. bso Y'S A: I was not raised in a before the Six-Day Zionist home and do not War and suddenly think of myself as a Zionist. imagining a world kt,11 I am an Englishman who without Israel. thinks like an Englishman Thereafter, par- and writes like an ticularly as the "brave Englishman and has English little Israel" that went into the war literature in his blood. became the "Zionist oppressor" that In the past, when I thought of a won it, I grew conscious of a wrong — Jewish homeland, it was Manhattan. primarily an intellectual wrong — that This is not to say I was brought up to had begun to permeate the whole think ill of Israel. But it was a distant subject. country. I wasn't encouraged to join So it's above all as a writer that I any of the pro-Zionist youth groups in speak as I do on this subject. British Manchester where I grew up; I wasn't anti-Zionism is virulent in many ways; sold on the ideology of the kibbutz; but it's as a crime against history, but the family always put money in the against thought, against reason, that I charity box to plant Israeli trees when attack it. it came round. - Elizabeth Applebaum 1<0 ta, 10