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Arts & Entertainment
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Simple Ingredients (Clarkson Potter;
$35); Jewish author Mark Bittman's
How To Cook Everything (10th
Anniversary Completely Revised
Edition): 2,000 Simple Recipes for
Great Food (Wiley; $35) and Rachael
Ray's Rachael Ray's Big Orange
Book: Her Biggest Ever Collection
of All-New 30-Minute Meals Plus
Kosher Meals, Meals for One, Veggie
Dinners, Holiday Favorites, and
Much More (Clarkson Potter; $24.95).
For the Movie Buff
In Searching for Schindler
(Doubleday; $25), Thomas Keneally,
author of Schindler's List, shares the
story behind the discovery of the
Schindler story and the efforts to
bring the tale to both page and screen.
For the Hollywood Devotee
The Beatles put him on their Sgt.
Pepper album cover, and Elvis copied
his look. Now, in American Prince:
A Memoir (Harmony; $25.95),
Golden Age of Hollywood screen star
Tony Curtis — the former Bernard
Schwartz, a Hungarian Jewish kid
from the Bronx — reveals all about a
life that brought him incredible highs
and debilitating lows.
For the Silent Screen Fan
An amalgam of biography, film his-
tory and analysis, Douglas Fairbanks
(University Of California Press; $45) by
Jeffrey Vance traces the star's personal
and professional life — from his birth
to a Jewish father and non-Jewish
mother disturbed by his Semitic looks
to his career as one of the film indus-
try's first superstars and more.
For the Beatlemaniac
Author Philip Norman exhaustively
researched his subject and garnered
exclusive interviews for John Lennon
(Ecco; $34.95), a new biography that
brings to life the portrait of a man far
more damaged, insecure and obses-
sive than most people might have
imagined, and details his relation-
ship with the Beatles' first manager,
Brian Epstein, the son of a well to do
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C14 December 11. 2008
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For the Traveler
State by State: A
Panoramic Portrait of
America (Ecco; $29.95),
edited by Matt Weiland and
Sean Wilsey, is an eclectic
collection of essays by
acclaimed novelists, journal-
ists, graphic novelists and
musicians describing the ordinary
people and places within our 50 states
and capturing their quintessential dif-
ferences. Jewish contributors include
writers Paul Greenberg (Alaska), Myla
Goldberg (Maryland), Tony Horwitz
(Virginia) and musician Carrie
Brownstein (Washington).
For the Audiobook Lover
For those who prefer to "hear" their
books, Leora Skolkin-Smith's award-
winning 2005 book Edges: 0 Israel 0
Palestine, a deeply sensual story about
a young girl's coming of age in Israel
in 1963, is now available in the form
of an audiobook, Edges (Midsummer
Sound; $24.95), read by actress Tovah
Feldshuh. Next year, a film version,
titled The Fragile Mistress, is due on
the silver screen.
For the Kids
In The Miracle Jar: A Hanukkah
Story (Tanglewood Press; $16.95), for
ages 3-8, author Audrey Penn (The
Kissing Hand) and illustrator Lea
Lyon bring the spirit of Chanukah and
the possibility of modern miracles
to readers. In The Chanukah Mice
(Marshall Cavendish; $14.99), for
ages 4-8, by author Steven Kroll and
illustrator Michelle Shapiro, a mouse
family celebrates Chanukah. Author
Barbara Diamond Goldin and illus-
trator Avi Katz tell the story of the
Knoodle family's search for the perfect
gifts in The Best Chanukah Ever
(Marshall Cavendish; $16.99), for ages
5-8. Written by Richard Michelson and
illustrated by Ron Mazellan, A is for
Alphabet: A Jewish Family Alphabet
(Sleeping Bear Press; $17.95), for ages
6-10, explores Jewish culture, his-
tory, celebrations and traditions with
simple rhymes and sidebar text that
provides more in-depth information
for older readers and parents. Genesis:
The Book With 70 Faces, A Guide for
the Family (Pitsopany Press; $29.95),
by Esther Takac with illustrations by
Anna Pignataro, looks at the first bibli-
cal book's major themes, encouraging
children ages 8-14 to apply the ideas
to their own life experiences. LJ