Decker and his wife Rina have agreed to help raise, forbidden teen romance and teen "suicides" at an elite prep school. Kick Back from page 34 where he becomes a smashing success; his fortunes and romantic liaisons thrive in cyberspace while he remains blind to the fact that his real life is sinking. In the historical novel The Midwife of Venice (Simon & Schuster), Roberta Rich tells the story of Hannah Levi, a Jewish woman with a traditional profession and a strong sense of ethics who lives in difficult times. Rich captures the dark atmosphere of the 16th-century Venetian ghetto, with its bridges and canals, and complicated relationships between Jews and gentiles. The Seventh Gate (Overlook) by Richard Zimler is another literary, mystical and historical murder mystery by the American writer who makes his home in Portugal and publishes his bestsellers internationally. This novel, with its inter- locking mysteries, is set in 1932 Berlin, with a young woman at the center whose father and brother have become Nazis, and she joins a secret resistance group. Zimler tells of the less well-known and terribly brutal crimes against handicapped people during the Holocaust. He reintroduces a character from his highly praised first novel, The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon. From Irene Nemirovsky (Suite Francaise), who died in Auchwitz in 1942, two novels recently published in English: Jezebel (Vintage Original) is the riveting tale — part love story, part murder mystery — of Gladys Eysenach, a beautiful socialite unwilling to face certain realities, who finds herself on trial for murder. All Our Worldly Goods (Vintage Original) is another portrait of lives torn apart by war; a couple's marriage provokes a family feud between two powerful families in a small French town. In Trapeze (Other Press), Simon Mawer, author of The Glass Room, has written a novel based on the true story of a young English woman recruited to work as a spy in Occupied France — one of only 53 women trained for combat by the Western Allies. 36 June 21 ' 2012 In a family saga set in the most insular community of Chasidic Jews, the Satmar, Anouk Markovits' English-language debut, I Am Forbidden (Hogarth), spans four generations, cultures and continents — from pre-World War II Transylvania to 1960s Paris to modern-day Brooklyn — telling the story of two Satmar sisters, the devout Mila and the rebellious Atara, whose differing beliefs take them on divergent paths. For a memoir about liv- ing in and leaving the Satmar community, see Deborah Feldman's Unorthodox: The Scandalous Rejection of My Hasidic Roots: A Memoir (Simon & Schuster). Nights of Awe (Bitter Lemon Press) by Harry Nykanen, translated by Kristian London, is the first in a new series of mysteries featuring Inspector Ariel Kafka of the Violent Crime Unit of the Helsinki police (and one of two Jewish cops in Finland). Here, during the days leading up to Yom Kippur, he is faced with the most difficult case of his career, when two Arab men are killed in Helsinki and soon after additional Muslim bodies are found in a garage owned by Iraqis. The Mossad gets involved when an Israeli minister makes an unofficial visit to the Finnish capital. Nykanen, who was a longtime crime reporter for Finland's largest newspaper, is the author of more than 30 novels and has been awarded Finland's crime writing award. In Daniel Friedman's Don't Ever Get Old (Minotaur), a funny and fast-paced tale of revenge, 88-year-old badass retired Memphis cop (and Holocaust survivor) Buck (real name Baruch) Schatz is physi- cally declining but maintains his cop's watchfulness. His .357 Magnum comes in handy as he and his grandson hunt down the SS officer who tormented Buck in a death camp during the war and escaped Germany with a fortune in stolen gold. Faye Kellerman's 21st volume of her popu- lar Decker/Lazarus Jewish detective series, Gun Games (Morrow) involves a 15-year- old Christian boy LAPD Detective Peter Psychological thriller writer Jesse Kellerman (Faye's son) has written Potboiler (Putnam), a satire that is both a thriller and a parody of a thriller. Arthur Pfefferkorn, a middle-aged college profes- sor with long-dead literary aspirations, is a best friend to Bill De Vallee, a writer of hugely successful but formulaic best- selling thrillers. When Bill is lost at sea, Arthur discovers his friend's unfinished manuscript and surreptitiously rewrites it as his own. When Arthur decides to recon- nect with Bill's widow (the woman Arthur has always loved), a surreal chain of events is set in motion. Emmy and Golden Globe winner Howard Gordon (The X-Files, 24), now the creator of Showtime's critically acclaimed Homeland, follows up his 2011 novel, Gideon's War, with Hard Target (Touchstone), the story of a harrow- ing attempt to stop a terrorist plot from destroying the U.S. government; back in action are brothers Gideon and Tillman Davis. Former New York Times reporter Alex Berenson's The Shadow Patrol (Putnam) is his sixth spy thriller detailing the exploits of ex-CIA operative John Wells, who goes undercover in the Muslim world to take readers inside America's troubled efforts to win the war in Afghanistan. International spy novel The Spy Who Jumped Off the Screen (Viking) by Thomas Caplan is the story of a former special operations officer turned block- buster movie star who, using his celebrity as disguise, is enlisted by the president to prevent the transfer of nuclear weap- ons into dangerous hands. Caplan was a roommate of President Bill Clinton when both attended the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service; the former president acted as a volunteer editor, help- ing the author "fine-tune the book and increase its momentum in certain places:' says Caplan. An intellectual horror story taking place in a post-apocalyptic New York, The Flame Alphabet (Knopf) by Ben Marcus tells the story of an epidemic: The speech of children suddenly becomes lethal to their parents. At first, it affects only Jews, but soon it spreads to the rest of the world, and parents must abandon their children to survive. A Jewish couple, Sam and Claire, find it difficult to leave their daugh- ter, Esther, even as they waste away from her malevolent speech. The novel begs the question: What is left of civilization when we lose the ability to communicate with those we love? In American Dervish (Little, Brown) by Ayad Akhtar, set in a Muslim-American community in the early 1980s, Hayat, the only child of a lapsed fundamental- ist father and a devout mother, becomes transfixed by the Quran when his mother's beautiful, devout best friend, Mina, comes to live with them. But when Mina finds her own path to happiness, the ember of jealousy in Hayat's heart is inflamed by the community's anti-Semitism. Sayed Kashua is an Arab who writes in Hebrew, lives in a Jewish neighborhood in Jerusalem and writes humorous columns about Arabs in Israel caught between two worlds. His second novel, Second Person Singular (Grove Press), winner of the 2011 Bernstein Award, an annual Israeli literary award for writers 50 years of age and under, centers on an ambitious lawyer who is one of the best Arab criminal attor- ney in Jerusalem and has a thriving prac- tice in the Jewish part of the city. One day he picks up a novel at a used bookstore and finds a love letter, in Arabic, in his wife's handwriting. Consumed with suspi- cion and jealousy, he hunts for the previ- ous owner — according to the inscrip- tion, a man named Yonaton — pulling at the strings that hold their lives together. Kashua also is creator of the Israeli sitcom Arab Labor. MEMOIRS Father's Day: A Journey into the Mind & Heart of My Extraordinary Son (Harcourt Houghton Mifflin) by Buzz Bissinger recounts the cross-country journey by Bissinger and his 24-year old son Zach. A twin, Zach has spent his life attending special-needs schools while his brother is now a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania. The duo revisit places they have been to before as Bissinger seeks to understand Zach's view of the world as well as his own life history and choices. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author shows readers important truths about autism and reveals Zach's percep- tiveness and character. Writing with beautiful clarity, humil- ity and breathtaking candor, Joy Ladin, in Through the Door of Life: A Jewish Journey Between Genders (University of Wisconsin Press), explains that at her core, she understood that somehow her soul and body were not one; she felt as though a ghost, inhabiting a body that didn't feel like her own. She switched genders while working as a professor of English at Yeshiva University. And she understood the enormous pain that the transition from man to woman would cause her wife and children. Often, she contem- plated suicide. Ultimately, she chooses life. Throughout, she expresses the emotional