• Now Opel*
CatewayCenter
14 Mile tti..110Vhart
take Rd.
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or more
Not valid with any other offer
Not valid on breakfast specials
With coupon
$2.00
Off
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Off
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Purchase of $20.00
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or more
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Your
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Exp 1/15/12
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J L
Open 7 days . a Week for breakfast Mach and dinner
www.leosconeyisland.coni
Leo's Grand River location
is aVailable for your - next
SOetial occasion.
Up to 200 people, no charge for the room and
pick from Leo's regular menu or from our
catering menu featuring, wing dings, ribs,
shish kebobs, pizza and full bar service
40380 Grand RiVet
beifittell Haggerty a Meadowlitotik
248.615-2102
MILES IS BACK & WISHES YOU A VERY HAPPY CHANUKAH
SALADS • SANDWICHES • LUNCH SPECIALS • DINNERS
If You Want The Best, Give Us A Test
I
V I I
C111
641 INS i
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1
by
I ellOASTED CHICKEN
BAR-
8
-
Q
,
I
SEAFOOD
MILES I
OFF
-
I
27847 Orchard Lake Road 1
at 12 Mile (NW corner)
I
I Farmington Hills, MI 48334 I 1
Open 7 Days at 11 am
I
I
ENTIRE BILL 1 :
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Dine in only!
Exp. 12/28/11
'■■
/
Mt MN WIN
I
68
- INK 11111•11 NM MO
(248) 488-5555 1
Call (248)
CATERING FOR ALL
OCCASIONS
ENTIRE
I CARRY OUT 1
Exp. 12/28/11
Keep your company top of mind with our readers.
ADVERTISE WITH US! CALL 248.351.5107
Visit theJEWISHNEWS.com
Books
from page 65
born; it's a lighthearted story of family
connections and a grandmother's pas-
sion for cleaning.
FOR THE BIOGRAPHY FAN
The newest installments in Yale's Jewish
Lives series:
Emma Goldman: Revolution as a
Way of Life (Yale University Press) by
Vivan Gornick portrays the Russian-born
activist, anarchist and labor organizer who
came of age in America and whose whole
being was dedicated to protesting the tyr-
anny of institutions over individuals.
Leon Trotsky: A Revolutionary's
Life (Yale University Press) by Joshua
Rubinstein, a expert on human rights and
the former Soviet Union, tells the story of
the driven and charismatic crusader for
justice who wreaked havoc once in power.
The latest installment in the Jewish
Encounters series:
Ben Gurion: A Political Life
(Schocken/Nextbook), by Shimon Peres,
president of the State of Israel, and jour-
nalist David Landau; the revelatory new
biography of Israel's founding father and
first prime minister evokes a prophetic
visionary and a canny pragmatist who
early on grasped the necessity for corn-
promise for national survival.
FOR THE CIVIL WAR BUFF
Author Tony Horwitz (Confederates
in the Attic) revisits mid-19th-century
America in Midnight Rising: John
Brown and the Raid That Sparked the
Civil War (HarperCollins), bringing to
life the crusader who vowed to conse-
crate his life to the destruction of slavery.
FOR THE GADGET GURU
Hedy's Folly: The Life and
Breakthrough Inventions of Hedy
Lamarr, the Most Beautiful Woman
in the World (Doubleday) by Richard
Rhodes is the story of the Jewish,
Vienna-born actress who comes to the
U.S., becomes a Hollywood star and,
with the help of fellow inventor musician
George Antheil, discovers spread-spec-
trum frequency hopping, a technique
that can be used for jam-proof wireless
communication in everything from sub-
marine transmission to cell phones.
FOR THE GRAPHIC ARTIST
In Just My Type: A Book About Fonts
(Gotham), Simon Garfield looks into
the history of fonts, meets the design-
ers behind the typefaces and takes an
in-depth look at the best and worst fonts
through the ages.
The work of the late, Jewish graphic
designer and filmmaker best known
for his motion picture title sequences
(Psycho, North by Northwest), plus dozens
of iconic corporate logos, is chronicled
in Saul Bass: A Life in Film and Design
(Laurence King Publishers) by Jennifer
Bass and Pat Kirkham.
FOR THE GRAPHIC
NARRATIVE FAN
In the pages of Metamaus: A Look
Inside a Modern Classic, Maus
(Pantheon), Art Spiegelman re-enters the
Pulitzer Prize-winning Maus, a book that
redefined how we see literature, com-
ics and the Holocaust ever since it was
published 25 years ago, and describes
his creative process; a bonus DVD with
interviews, historical documents and
more is included.
In The Influencing Machine
(Norton), a work of graphic nonfiction,
Brooke Gladstone, host of NPR's On The
Media, and Josh Neufeld guide readers
through the distortions and complexities
of the modern media.
FOR THE FOODIE
In Try This: Traveling the
Globe without Leaving the Table
(HarperCollins), Danyelle Freeman,
founder and editor of www.
restaurantgirl.com , covers the world's
most popular cuisines, including how to
order and eat them.
Food writer Lauren Shockey details
her life as a young woman in the hyper-
masculine world of restaurant kitchens
in Four Kitchens: My Life Behind the
Burner in New York, Hanoi, Tel Aviv
and Paris (Grand Central Publishing).
FOR THE SPIRITUAL
SEEKER
In Learning to Breathe: My
Yearlong Quest to Bring Calm to My
Life (Free Press), Jewish author Patricia
Warner (The Faith Club), suffering for
more than 40 years from anxiety and
panic attacks, takes readers on her jour-
ney as she seeks to rewire her brain and
her body in search of her own "inner
monk."
FOR THE ISRAELIST
Gershon Gorenberg's The Unmasking
of Israel (Harper) looks at Israeli poli-
cies that may undercut democracy and
threaten the continued existence of Israel
as a Jewish state.
Simon Sebag Montefiore's Jerusalem:
The Biography (Knopf) is a detailed
portrait of the city, told through those
who were instrumental in its history,
including the author's ancestor, Sir
Moses Montefiore.
FOR THE READER IN A
HURRY
All kinds of texts of many genres —
from the Bible to pressing topics of the
21st century — written by advocates of
every kind of Judaism imaginable, are
summarized in One Hundred Great
Jewish Books: Three Millennia of
Jewish Conversation by Rabbi Lawrence
Hoffman (BlueBridge). I 1
Suzanne Chessler contributed to this article.