arts & entertainment Kick Back from page 33 concentration camps of World War II, the union movement in Chicago in the 1940s and the legal battle for black civil rights in the United States of the 1950s. Comic writers Dave Barry (married to former Detroit sportswriter Michelle Kaufman) and Alan Zweibel (a close friend and collaborator with the late Detroit-born comedienne Gilda Radner) have written Lunatics (Putnam), about the comic misadventures of Philip Horkman, a happy man who owns a pet store and is a referee for kids' soccer and the usually very sane Jeffrey Peckerman, who is having a really bad day; a swiftly escalating series of events sends them running for their lives, pursued by the police, soldiers, terrorists, subversives, bears and a man dressed as Chuck E. Cheese. The authors are adapting the novel for film, with Steve Carrel set to star. The Bookie's Son (SixOneSeven Books/ paperback) by Andrew Goldstein is the tale of a young hustler in the Bronx, circa 1960, trying to pay back his father's debt and save his family. When his father, who works in the garment business and gam- bles on the side, crosses a Jewish gangster, he has to go into hiding, so it's up to the young man to take over his father's bookie business. Meanwhile, his mother tries to raise funds, too — plotting to embezzle money — before the gangsters carry out their threats. The debut novel draws on the author's own experience growing up in the Bronx. In Ted Heller's (son of Catch - 22 novelist Joseph Heller) satirical novel Pocket Kings (Algonquin/paperback), author Frank Dixon's writing career is at a dead end so he ventures into the world of online poker, Kick Back on page 36 These authors perfected their writing chops at the University of Michigan. ative Detroiter Scott Lasser's fourth novel, Say Nice Things About Detroit (Norton), draws a gritty and complex portrait of his hometown. A love story about family, second chances and the meaning of home, it's also a gripping novel about the complicated urban politics of the 21st century. Twenty-five years after his high-school graduation, and escap- ing from the pain of divorce and his son's death, David Halpert returns from Colorado to Detroit, where he discovers his high-school sweetheart Natalie and her half-black brother have been killed. Beginning a journey through Detroit's white suburbs and black inner city, he and Natalie's sis- ter, Carolyn, reconnect, find solace in each other and try to make sense of the mystery behind the murders. Lasser, also the author of the novels Battle Creek, All I Could Get and The Year That Follows, earned his master of fine arts degree from the University of Michigan. N In The World Without You (Pantheon Books), Joshua Henkin tells the story of three generations of the Frankel family, who travel to their Berkshires summer home over the Fourth of July weekend. They gather to mark the first anniversary of the tragic death of Leo, the youngest of four siblings and a journalist who was killed on assign- ment in Iraq. One sister is struggling with infertility, another is angry and the other is newly Orthodox and liv- ing in Israel (and feeling out of place, although the parents make sure to arrange for kosher meals). Each per- son, including Leo's wife, arrives with heartaches, struggles, questions and complexities that unravel over the course of the three days. The author of Matrimony and Swimming Across the Hudson, Henkin directs the fiction- writing program at Brooklyn College in New York City. He received his M.F.A. from the University of Michigan. Moving back and forth in time, Peter Orner explores themes of memory and nostalgia, regret and rebuilding, as he depicts the joys and struggles of four generations of Chicago's Popper fami- ly in Love and Shame and Love (Little, Brown). Alexander Popper can't stop remembering when his father threw him into Lake Michigan at age 4; told to sink or swim, he feels like he's still bobbing in the frigid water. Other members of the family also struggle to remain afloat. Early scenes take place in Ann Arbor, as U-M creative writing major Alexander Popper meets his future wife, Kat Rubin. Orner skillfully illuminates the way that love both makes us whole and completely unrav- els us. The author of the novel The Second Coming of Mavala Shikongo and the short-story collection Esther Stories, Orner is a graduate of the University of Michigan. Ann Pearlman was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award for Infidelity, a work of nonfiction that was also made into a Lifetime movie. In her new novel, A Gift for My Sister (Atria), she tells an American family story about Tara and Sky, two vastly different sisters she first introduced in her novel The Christmas Cookie Club. As they accept and define family to include members of different races, Pearlman poses the questions: Where did I come from, how do I cope with eccentric luck and reversals of for- tune, and how do I find my place in the changing world of the 21st century? Pearlman, whose own family includes members from many ethnic groups – Jewish, African-American, German, Irish and Cherokee – studied writing at the University of Michigan. Jews Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News On The Tube In case you missed it, the second season of the lawyer show Suits is back on the USA Network, with the second episode airing at 10 p.m. Macht Thursday, June 21. One of the best reviewed and most watched shows of last summer, the series stars Gabriel Macht, 40, in what looks to be the breakout role for this handsome actor. On Sunday evening, June 24, the new HBO series The Newsroom premieres. The show was created by Aaron Sorkin (The West Wing, 34 June 21 . 2012 The Social Network), 51. He wrote or co-wrote all of the first season's 10 episodes. The series chronicles the behind-the-scenes events at a fictional cable news channel and fea- tures an ensemble cast that includes Michigander Jeff Daniels as the anchor. TV Land brings back the comedy Retired at 35 for a second season at 10 p.m. Tuesday, June 26. It stars George Segal, 78, and Jessica Walter, 71, as a retired couple whose adult son, David, moves into their retirement-community home. Tony-winning actress Marissa Jaret Winokur Winokur (Hairspray), 39, has joined the cast this season. She plays Amy, David's sister. Amy is described as "a sharp- tongued, quick-witted, successful saleswoman for a pharmaceutical company, with a bubbly personality." Bar Mitzvah Boy I feel like a party pooper, but I can give only one "mazel toy" out of a possible four to the bar mitzvah earlier this month of actor David Arquette, 40. Arquette was in Israel to film a travel show /4 } A when he visited the Arquette Western Wall and a rabbi suggested he be bar mitzvahed; the actor agreed. Not more than a year ago, I heard Arquette proclaim his personal belief in Jesus on a talk show. I doubt the rabbi asked Arquette about his religious beliefs. He prob- ably just asked Arquette if he was Jewish, and when Arquette replied that his late mother was Jewish – the rabbi suggested a bar mitzvah. I don't doubt that Arquette was sincere in having the ceremony. But he is by his own admission a guy who has been troubled with emotional and substance abuse problems. In other words, don't rely on this bar mitzvah as some long-lasting commitment to mainstream Judaism. Time will tell if it means much. Contact Nate Bloom at middleoftheroadl@aol.com .