became friends with Bobby Fischer when they were children, has written Endgame: Bobby Fischer's Remarkable Rise and Fall — from America's Brightest Prodigy to the Edge of Madness (Crown), part tra- ditional biography and part personal mem- oir. He traces the Jewish chess champion's chessboard artistry as well as his eventual paranoia and outspoken anti-Semitism. Sugar in my Bowl: Real Women Write About Real Sex, edited by Erica Jong, assembles a provocative collection of essays on sex from some of today's most prominent female writers, journalists and thinkers, including Anne Roiphe, Daphne Merkin, Eve Ensler and Jennifer Weiner. Markel writes of the physical and emo- tional damage caused by the then-heralded wonder drug and how each man ultimately changed the world in spite of it — or because of it. One became the father of psy- choanalysis; the other, of modern surgery. Dr. Markel is director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the University of Michigan. rAEMOIRS Suze Orman delivers a master class on per- sonal finance in The Money Class: Learn to Create Your New American Dream (Spiegel and Grau), refashioning her advice about home, family, career and retirement for a new economic age. When her oldest four children started going off to college, writer Melissa Faye Greene and her husband began expanding their family, adopting five children over eight years from orphanages in Ethiopia and Bulgaria. In her new memoir, No Biking in the House Without a Helmet (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), Greene presents a domestic comedy about a family — often mistaken for a scout troop — that tries to live in harmony. From medical historian Howard Markel (When Germs Travel) comes An Anatomy of Addiction: Sigmund Freud, William Halsted and the Miracle Drug Cocaine (Pantheon, July 19), the account of the years-long cocaine use of Freud, a young and ambitious neurologist, and Halsted, the equally young, path-finding surgeon. Allen Shawn — son of the legendary New Yorker editor William Shawn and brother of actor-writer Wallace Shawn — grew up to become a composer and professor. In his new memoir, Twin (Viking), he writes of his journey to get to know his twin sister, Mary, institutionalized at age 8 in the 1950s for what was later diagnosed as autism. The memoir The Perfect Nazi: Uncovering My Grandfather's Secret Past (G.P. Putnam's Sons) is the story of how author Martin Davidson, a filmmaker and histo- rian of Scottish descent now living England, went about piecing together the hidden past to discover a buried family secret: His grandfather (from whom the author's mother had long been estranged) had been an SS officer in Hitler's army. Raised half-Jewish and half-Mormon, Roseanne Barr, in Roseannearchy: Dispatches From the Nut Farm (Gallery Books), unleashes her always controversial observations on everything from hypoc- risy, hubris and pharmaceuticals to class warfare, feminism, the cult of celebrity and Kaballah. In her chapter "What is a Jew," she offers her definition: "1. A Jew is a per- son who thinks they know what everyone thinks, and that it is different from what they themselves think. 2. A Jew is one who also believes that all those other Jews are wrong. " , CONEY ISLAND In Season To Taste: How I Lost My Sense of Smell and Found My Way (Ecco), aspiring chef Molly Birnbaum writes of a devastating accident that seemed to derail her plans for a culinary career and her grand quest to understand and overcome her condition. Larry King looks back on his career at CNN and his personal life in Truth Be Told: Off the Record about Favorite Guests, Memorable Moments, Funniest Jokes and a Half Century of Asking Questions (Weinstein Books), having his say about marriage, politics, sports, entertainment, the justice system, broadcasting and the American future. In The Memory of All That: George Gershwin, Kay Swift and My Family's Legacy of Infidelities (Crown; July 19), novelist Katharine Weber (Triangle:A Novel) tells the story of her colorful and famous family, including the scandalous 10-year love affair between her married grandmother composer Kay Swift and George Gershwin. Finally, what summer reading list is complete without a baseball book? Two- time All-Star Shawn Green's The Way of Baseball (Simon and Schuster) is part memoir, part philosophical study and part spiritual journey. Here, he shares the lessons the game taught him about being present and attaining inner stillness — no matter what life throws you (including being a Jewish baseball player in L.A., "where every conversa- tion asserted that I was 'the next Sandy Koufax." ) 1-1 the CI° fa° •get). Now at our Grand River location in Novi, we have a banquet facility that is perfect for your next golf outing, graduation, bar/bat mitzvah, business meeting, wedding rehearsal, showers, memorial luncheon and any other occasion. Up to 200 people. No charge for the room. Pick your food choice from Leo's regular menu (featuring award winning Coney's and salads) or from the catering menu that features wing dings, ribs, shish kebobs, pizza and a full bar. We also do off-site catering 40380 Grand River Between Meadowbrook S Haggerty 248-615-2102 www.LeosSportsGrill.com June 23 1 2011 JIM 33