Arts & Entertainmen Festival Of Books from page 71 MEMOIR/BIOGRAPHY Michael Chabon, in a series of interlinked autobiographical essays, Manhood for Amateurs: The Pleasures and Regrets of a Husband, Father and Son (Harper), reflects on sexuality, nostalgia, innocence, hypocrisy, regret, love, divorce and more. He captures small moments in all their possibility, in his own childhood as well as his present life. He writes of hanging out with his grandmother as a child, the pleasures of cooking as an adult and his ongoing love of comic books. The author of The Yiddish Policeman's Union and The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay lives in Berkeley, Calif Louis D. Brandeis: A Life by Melvin I. Urofsky (Pantheon) is the first full-scale biography in 25 years of the Supreme Court associate justice. Drawing on newly available material and family papers, the author documents Justice Brandeis' per- sonal life as well as the complexities of his legal positions, his work developing the idea of pro bono legal work and his contri- butions as an economist, moralist and also a Zionist. The author is professor emeritus of history at Virginia Commonwealth University. One of America's most prominent comedic writers, playwright/screenwriter/ novelist Paul Rudnick offers in I Shudder: And Other Reactions to Life, Death and New Jersey (Harper) 15 autobiographi- cal essays that cover a variety of material, from his early childhood in Piscataway, N.J., to his journeys through the words of theater and film. In a similar vein, former war pho- tojournalist Deborah Copaken Kogan (Shutterbabe) has written Hell Is Other Parents — And Other Tales of Maternal Combustion (Voice), a romp through the landmines of modern working par- enthood. The author, who moved to Manhattan to raise a family — after cov- ering conflicts in such war-torn areas as Afghanistan, Israel and the former Soviet Union — finds herself at odds with the competitive, aggressive and sometimes woefully misguided helicopter parents in her midst. Seth Rogovoy, author of The Essential Klezmer, brings his expertise in music and Judaism to Bob Dylan: Prophet, Mystic, Poet (Scribner). For the first time, he unearths the various strands of Judaism that appear throughout Dylan's life and work, explaining the infiltration of Jewish content — drawn from the Bible, Talmud and the Kaballah — at the heart of Dylan's songs. In his memoir Eating (Knopf), a book celebrating a lifetime of pleasure in cook- ing and eating well, Jason Epstein tells stories about some of his favorite dishes (recipes included) and how they fit into his own life. Epstein is the former edito- rial director of Random House, where he was responsible for publishing and editing 161 Show Her The Money saw In a world where elaborate pranks In are pulled in order to get a TV deal (hello, Balloon Boy) and the eco- nomic downturn has made entertain- ment executives wary of taking any um chances, most artists can only make ffp their dreams a reality by being born into show business, becoming a news 1 111...ir item (hello, Octo-Mom) or winning 42 American Idol. For Mindy Raf, the Michigan-born come- dienne who lives and performs in New York City, the answer came in join- ing with Kickstarter, a new online Internet funding platform, Mindy Raf where she is being sponsored to receive funding directly from the public. The buzz around Kickstarter has been covered in 72 December 10 • 2009 the New York Times, on NPR and in Entertainment Weekly, to name a few. Raf has been seen as a regular talking head on VH1's Best Week Ever and CollegeHumor. Her creation, the alt-chick rocker, Leibya Rogers, has been described as "if Ani DiFranco and the Indigo Girls had a baby, on crack." Check out Raf/Roger's new video, "Empire State of Bloomberg," a remix of "Empire State of Mind" by Alicia Keys and Jay Z, in response to the mayoral election, on YouTube. Raf has until Dec. 23 to raise $3,000 and reach her goal of press- ing 500 records and releasing her comedy album as alter ego Leibya Rogers. At press time, she was two- thirds of the way to her goal. Go to Raf's page on Kickstarter, see her work and pledge your financial sup- port (minimum donation $1): www. mindyraf.com/fundfunny. such authors as Norman Mailer, Vladimir Nabokov, Gore Vidal and E.L. Doctorow. Two juicy biographies of another kind examine the lives of Hollywood starlets who converted to Judaism when they married Jewish men. The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe (Grand Central Publishing) by J. Randy Taraborrelli touch- es on Monroe's life with playwright Arthur Miller and claims to unearth the truth about her relationship with the Kennedys. William J. Mann's How to Be a Movie Star: Elizabeth Taylor in Hollywood (Houghton Mifflin; $28) covers her mar- riages to Jewish husbands Mike Todd and Eddie Fisher in a bio that explains how Taylor ignited the sexual revolution in America, helped kick down the studio system and practically invented the big business of celebrity star making. SHOW BUSINESS "It's there in the plaintiff undertow, the feeling that yearning is eternal and sorrow not very far from the moment's joy," David Lehman writes, explaining the distinctively Jewish character of American popular songs written by the likes of Irving Berlin, George Gershwin and Howard Arlen. He might have been talking about Jewish writ- ing, in general. In A Fine Romance: Jewish Songwriters, American Songs (Nextbook/ Schocken), Lehman, a poet and critic, looks at the American Songbook and the stories behind songs like "Love Walked In," Film Notes Serious Moonlight, now in theaters, is a black comedy starring Meg Ryan as successful atorney Louise, who meets her husband Ian (Tim Hutton) at their country home for what she believes to be a romantic weekend. Instead, he tells Louise he is leaving her a younger woman. She reacts by tying Ian up and refus- ing to release him Adrienne until he agrees to Shelly work on their mar- riage. Moonlight was the last screenplay completed by actress/writer/director Adrienne Shelly (Waitress) before her murder in 2006. Opening Dec. 11 is Skin, based on the true story of Sandra Laing, a South African girl who was born "Someone to Watch Over Me" and "Stormy Weather" — all written by Jews. With wit and style, Lehman draws connections between these songs of love and their cre- ators' sensibilities. In a similar vein, Geniuses of the American Musical Theatre (Applause) by Herbert Keyser collects biographies of 28 (at least 20 of them Jewish) of the great- est songwriters and lyricists of Broadway musicals, including Berlin, Gershwin, Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Sondheim and Jerry Herman. The author once hoped for a show business career himself but as the child of two deaf parents, he enrolled in medical school instead. In Right Here on Our Stage Tonight (University of California), veteran entertainment journalist Gerald Nachman tells the complete saga of the Ed Sullivan Show, and through the voices of some 60 stars interviewed for the book, brings to life the most diverse, multicultural and influen- tial variety hour ever to air on TV For fans of comedy, there is The Second City Unscripted: Revolution and Revelation at the World-Famous Comedy Theater (Villard) by Chicagoan Mike Thomas, a Who's Who of the legend- ary comedy camp's alumni — including Jewish performers Alan Arkin, Harold in 1955. Laing's parents were white Afrikaners who were unaware of their black ancestry and supported racial segregation. They appeared to be Sophie white, as did their Okonedo first child. However, Sandra and her younger brother looked mixed race. Sandra was forced out of white schools and eventually out of white society. The film follows her over 30 years. Starring as Sandra is Oscar nominee Sophie Okonedo, 41, the daughter of a white English-Jewish mother and a black Nigerian father. Okonedo identifies as Jewish. I Arts Editor Gail Zimmerman contributed to this column.