Arts & Entertainment

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Never To Forget

For Yom HaShoah, a roundup
of recent Holocaust literature.

Suzanne Chessler
Special to the Jewish News

FICTION
Sobibor by Michael Lev (Gefen;
$19.95): A doctor recalls his life during
the Holocaust as he pursues legal retri-
bution for Nazi war criminals.

House of Childhood by Anna
Mitgutsch (Other Press; $24.95): An
architect seeks out the Austrian home
known by his mother and spends a
year there.

Farewell, Shanghai by Angel
Wagenstein (Other Press; $24.95):
German Jewish refugees are deter-
mined to live intelligently after escap-
ing the Nazis.

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A Hatred for Tulips by Richard
Lourie (Thomas Dunne Books;
$22.95): A young boy's desperation
changes the course of history in an
imagined account of the betrayal of
Anne Frank.

The Savior by Eugene Drucker
(Simon & Schuster; $23): A non-Jewish
violinist, forced to play at a concentra-
tion camp, becomes part of a macabre
experiment.

The Seventh Well by Fred Wander
(W.W. Norton; $23.95): Experiences
in 20 different concentration camps
reveal how the human spirit remained
indestructible in some people.

1940 by Jay Neugeboren (Two Dollar
Radio; $15): Hitler's Jewish pediatri-
cian undergoes some changes in a
novel that is both psychological thriller
and love story.

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•
Brass Pointe

24234 Orchard Lake Rd., N.E. corner of 10 Mile • 476-1377

Open 7 Days a week for lunch & dinner

CIO May l • 2008

David Golder, The Ball, Snow in
Autumn, The Courilof Affair by Irene
Nemirovsky (Everyman's Library: $25):
Among these tales is one about the
relationship of a French mother mar-
ried to her former boss, a rich German
Jew.

POETRY
A Wall of Two by Henia Karmel
and Ilona Karmel with adaptations by
Fanny Howe (University of California
Press; $16.95): Two sisters, Buchenwald
survivors, express the range of emo-
tions they experienced after being
forced into factory labor.

Holocaust by Charles Reznikoff
(Black Sparrow Books; $15.95): One
long poem examines historical docu-
ments related to the Nuremberg tribu-
nals and the Adolf Eichmann trial.

MEMOIRS
A Daughter of Two Mothers by
Miriam Cohen (Feldheim Publishers;
$29.95): A disabled widow's forced
separation from her infant daughter
launches a search and a legal battle.

Inhumanity: Death March to
Buchenwald and The Last Jews of
Bendzin by John Ranz (AuthorHouse;
$14.95): Resistance and disguise are at
the core of fighting the Nazis.

The Forger by Cioma Schonhaus
(Da Capo Press; $23): An art student
alters documents to help individuals
escape the Third Reich.

Until Our Last Breath by Michael
Bart and Laurel Corona (St. Martin's
Press; $25.95): A couple in the Vilna
ghetto experience love, struggle, resis-
tance and survival.

Zoo Station by David Downing
(Soho Crime; $23): An Anglo-
American journalist in Berlin struggles
to stay safe while maintaining his
morality.

Flory: A Miraculous Story of
Survival by Flory A. Van Beek
(HarperOne; $23.95): A story of hiding
is dramatized by shipwreck.

SHORT FICTION
The Street of Crocodiles and
Other Short Stories by Bruno Schulz
(Penguin; $15): A boy's life is recalled
in reality and fantasy with reference to
the Polish street on which he lived.

Rifke: An Improbable Life by
Rosalie Wise Sharp (ECW Press;
$34.95): The wife of Four Seasons
hotelier Isadore Sharp reveals her feel-
ings about the last generation of the
shtetl.

