Arts & Entertainment People Of The Books A special book for that special someone on your Chanukah gift list. Gail Zimmerman Arts & Entertainment Editor For the Letter Writer Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, Saul Bellow (1915-2005) was not only a celebrated novelist but also a prolific corre- spondent. In Saul Bellow: Letters (Viking: $35), edited by Benjamin Taylor, readers are privy to frank and intimate letters to family members, friends, wives, lovers and colleagues that span four generations, some catching his recipients up on the daily stuff of life, others philosophical meditations on literature, politics, and the state of the modern world. For the Lifelong Learner The newest entry in the Jewish Encounters "short biographies" series published by Schocken Books, Burnt Books: Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav and Franz Kafka ($25), by Rodger Kamanetz, draws on the lives and writings of Rabbi Nachman (1772-1810), a Chasidic master and reli- gious mystic who used storytelling to reach out to secular Jews, and Kafka (1883-1924), a secular artist fascinated by Jewish mysti- cism. Both men, who left strict instructions at the end of their lives that their unpub- lished works be burnt, gained prominence with the posthumous publication of their writing. Published earlier this year in the series: Yehuda Halevi ($25), by Hillel Halkin, about one of the greatest of Hebrew poets and a shining example of the synthesis of religion and culture that defined the golden age of medieval Spanish Jewry; and Hillel: If Not Now, When ($24), by Joseph Telushkin, a look at arguably Judaism's greatest rabbinic sage, whose teachings, stories and legal rulings can be found throughout the Talmud. Telushkin finds contemporary relevance in Hillel: "His core teachings have to do with acting ethically and convincing people to keep learning': he writes. "Ritual is all well and good, but behavior, the way we treat others, Jews and non-Jews alike, is foremost among all his concerns:' For Racers for the Cure In her memoir, Promise Me: How a Sister's Love Launched the Global Movement to End Breast Cancer (Crown Publishing; $25.99), Nancy G. Brinkner writes about the creation of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, now 30 years old and quite possibly the largest and most influential health advocacy organization in the world. What difference can one person make in the world? "Nancy's life is the answer:' said President Obama in 2009, upon awarding her the Presidential Medal of Freedom. For the Chic Lit Fan In Last Night at Chateau Marmont (Atria Books; $25.99), author Lauren Weisberger (The Devil Wears Prada) asks the ques- tion: What would happen if we got to live the glamorous celebrity lifestyle we ideal- ize from afar? In this, Weisberger's fourth novel, young New York nutritionist Brooke Alter, struggling to make ends meet sup- porting her musician husband, loves to escape into the dishy tabloid pages of Last Night, until the day her world and the gos- sip pages collide. For the Cartoon Connoisseur Ken Krimstein's cartoons have been published in the New Yorker, Punch and the Wall Street Journal. In Kvetch As Kvetch Can (Clarkson Potter; $12.99), he chronicles food, family, holidays, relation- ships — and guilt, in a sometimes tender, sometimes twisted take on the trials and tribulations of the "Tribe:' For the Observer of Human Behavior In The Upside of Irrationality: The Unexpected Benefits of Defying Logic at Work and at Home (Harper; $27.99), Duke University Professor of Psychology and Behavioral Economics Dan Ariely, in a follow-up to his award-winning bestseller Predictably Irrational, once again looks at the complex web of irrational decisions that drive our actions. Ariely defines the unseen forces — emotions, stress, pride, relativity, revenge, adaptation and more — that guide our choices and exposes the surprising negative and positive effects irrationality can have on our lives. For the Broadway Baby Before there was American Idol or America's Got Talent, there was Stagedoor Manor, a theater camp in the Catskills where big- time casting directors came to find the next generation of stars. In his book Theater Geek (Free Press; $25), author Mickey Rapkin details the three weeks he spent at the camp tracking three teen performers through the rivalries, heartbreak and triumphs of a summer at Stagedoor. The camp's alumni include Natalie Portman (who's been touted as a possible Best Actress Oscar nominee for next month's Black Swan), Zach Braff (Scrubs), Josh Charles (The Good Wife) and Lea Michele (Glee). For the Film Buff Sam Wasson's Fifth Avenue, 5 a.m.: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany's and the Dawn of the American Woman (Harper; $19.99) is the first- ever complete account of the making of Breakfast at Tiffany's. Through interviews with key play- ers and those involved in the film's production, he uncovers the movie's back story, shining a new light on the woman behind the little black dress and the film that made her an icon (did you know that Marilyn Monroe was the first choice for Holly Golightly?). For the Essay Aficionado In Half Empty, David Rakoff is back with a series of essays that deliver a darkly funny — and often poignant — look at the posi- tive side of pessimism. While making good sport out of cultur- al phenomena like "the tortured Jewish love affair with pork' or the positive psychology movement, he argues for "defensive pessimism" as the only approach to life: If you only assume the worst, you'll never be disappointed. In a similar vein, Nora Ephron follows up I Feel Bad About My Neck with further essays on aging in I Remember Nothing: And Other Reflections (Knopf; $22.95). "I like writing a bit of truth about getting Ephron recently told People magazine. "There's so much Pollyanna- ish stuff. `You have the best sex of your life!' People who say that should be shoe' For the Historical Fiction Fan In her debut novel, Russian Winter (Harper; $25.99), Daphne Latoly takes readers from modern-day Boston back to the Soviet Union in the last days of Stalin's regime as she relates the tale of a Russian ballerina who defected to the West. The narrative incorpo- rates letters, diaries and poetry as Latoly explores the mysterious provenance of a set of celebrated jewels and their connection to Russia's turbulent history. In the same genre, Joseph Skibell's A Curable Romantic (Algonquin; $26.95) presents Dr. Jakob Sammelsohn, part visionary/part schlemiel, a lovelorn Candide who, wandering through modern history, falls in with Sigmund Freud and some dangerously attractive women. For the Biography Fan In Sarah: The Life of Sarah Bernhardt (Yale University Press; $25), this first new book in Yale University's "Jewish Lives" series, Robert Gottlieb writes the first English- language biography of the famed actress in decades; and it is a fas- cinating look at the illegitimate child of a courtesan who came to personify the theater, and who — after a highly checkered per- sonal life — became a symbol of France. Although Bernhardt was baptized at age 12, her lifelong pride in her Jewish heritage led to the only quarrel she would ever have with her beloved son, Maurice, on the subject of Alfred Dreyfus. For the Judaica Collector 500 Judaica: Innovative Contemporary Ritual Art (Sterling; $24.95), by Ray Hemachandra and Daniel Belasco, fea- tures the work of more than 180 makers of Judaica in a variety of disciplines, including metalwork, woodwork, ceramics and needle arts. Amidst the beautiful artwork, the words of many of the makers explain what creating Judaica means to them. Books on page 53 November 25 • 2010 51