APPLE GRILL ASIAN CUISINE arts & entertainment Grand Opening Our Famous Dishes • • • • I Pad Thai Pad Ped Rice Bowl Noodle Bowl • Vegetable Deluxe with Chicken • General Tso's Chicken 6700 Orchard Lake Rd. BUY ONE 'GET ONE 50% OFF1 I OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE. I I West Bloomfield Plaza (3 doors down from Brody's) ENTREE APPLE GRILL ASIAN CUISINE Not valid with any other offers. Excludes tax. Expires 6/30/12 I Banquets Weddings Bar/Bat Mitzvahs Showers WE CATER AT MOST SYNAGOGUES , TEMPLES, HOTELS AND THE HALLS OF YOUR C ICE le4t #34/1.4e,. JEWEL Harvard professor uses Jewish background to discuss ideas important to Western culture. bunions Anniversaries Birthdays '11 ieat- One of the most significant ideas the author explores is the ability to overcome fear of death. Hours: Sun-Thurs 4pm-9pm Fri and Sat 4pin-9:30pm I a I. Stephen Greenblatt at the National Book Awards last November: (248)932-2889 Beth Kissileff JointMedia News Service ttc . A CLASSIC CUISINE ApprOved by Council of Orthodox Rabbis KOSHER CATERERS PHILIP TEWEL food & Beverage Director A8-661-4050 If IE Farmington fills 15% OFF Total Bill (excludes tax & tip) With coupon - not valid with any other offers I MM. .11, :1•11, JOY Mt BREAKFAST OPEN 7 DAYS 6:30 AM TO 3:00 PM MIO r MY MR MN "Our breakfast and lunch is so good, we can leave dinner to someone else!" 27909 Orchard Lake Rd. Corner of 12 Mile in the Orchard 12 Plaza • Farmington Hills Carry out available - call about delivery 248-994-73E18 FREE COFFEE With purchase of meal =I IMO MN NMI Me awe With coupon - not valid with any other offers Ask about our Scrambler Packs - Breakfast to go for 10 Beef Ribs \ Every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday only!! 10% OFF TOTAL BILL Brass Pointe (---7,7( cYfrift, 24234 Orchard Lake Rd., N.E. corner of 10 Mile • 476-1377 Open 7 Days a week for lunch & dinner 110 May 24 • 2012 it a few years ago, Stephen Greenblatt was asked to write on Vilna (also known as Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania) for the Nextbook series. However, realizing he did not have the requisite scholarly tools to summon up Vilna's Yiddish culture, Greenblatt ended up revealing a different lost (and recov- ered) world —and won the 2011 National Book Award in the process. Greenblatt's The Swerve: How the World Became Modern (W.W. Norton; $26.95) took the honor in nonfic- tion amid 441 entries in its category. The Harvard English professor's new volume is about a Latin poem, On the Nature of Things, by the ancient Roman poet Lucretius. Poggio Bracciolini, a humanist book hunter, rediscovered the poem in a 15th-century German monastery. Greenblatt argues that although one poem by itself could not be "respon- sible for an entire intellectual, moral and social transformation:' it was part of an important "swerve" of the world of ideas in a new direction. One of Lucretius' ideas was that individual particles swerve (meaning, turned aside, or be turned aside from a straight course) into existence with minimal motion. This movement, called "clinamen," "declination" or "inclination:' is the source of free will. The value of seeking pleasure and avoiding pain, as well as the notion that "understanding the nature of things generates deep wonder:' are other central tenets of this ancient poem — the subject of Greenblatt's book. One of the most significant ideas Greenblatt explores is the ability to overcome fear of death. In his intro- duction, he describes the significance of the words Lucretius said while growing up with a Jewish mother who was petrified of dying: "Death is noth- ing to us:' These words held a radical signifi- cance in the deeply Christian world of Renaissance Europe and were desta- bilizing, Greenblatt writes, shifting the views of many in that culture. Walter Englert — translator of Lucretius' poem (On the Nature of Things; Focus Publishing: 2003) and a classics professor at Reed College in Oregon — thinks Greenblatt's argu- ment is on the mark. "Finding Lucretius' poem in Latin, which brilliantly sets out an atomistic view of the universe that argues for the naturalistic unfolding of the uni- verse, without divine direction, and for the mortality of the soul, was a bit of a shock, as Greenblatt points out, and fit in nicely with the soon-to-be-devel- oped views of Copernicus and Galileo:' Englert told JointMedia News Service. Englert adds that the fact that Lucretius' philosophy was in poetic form meant that "once rediscovered, it could be recommended for copying and reading because of the beauty of the poetry, even though the doctrines in it [might be considered] 'wrong." Though Greenblatt is certainly con- cerned with ideas and their impact in this book, what gives the volume its potency is what his friend, architect Moshe Safdie, described in a phone interview. Safdie told JointMedia News Service that The Swerve is written like a "detective story" that the reader does not want to put down. Greenblatt recounts the journey of Poggio — from an important bureau- crat in the papal service to an inde- pendent humanist book hunter —