Ilkark,tion I n Lean In: Women, Work and the Will to Lead (Knopf), Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg explores women- in-the-workplace issues, with the author providing advice and anecdotes along with each piece of research. For example, studies show that women not only get less credit than men for helping out colleagues, but also that successful women are per- ceived as less likable by both sexes. Is this fair? No, not really, but as Sandberg aims to show in her book, women have the abil- ity to work to change things. In 1942, a U.S. military plane crashed in Greenland; the B-17 that was sent to rescue the men hit a glacier. On a second mission, a Grumman Duck got a single man out of the B-17 before disappearing forever. In intertwining narratives, Frozen in Time (Harper) by Mitchell Zuckoff documents the crashes between1942-1943 and the quest 70 years later to find the Duck's wreckage. Paced like a nail-biting novel, Zuckoff's account will have you on the edge of your seat as you navigate through the frozen wasteland known as Greenland. Writers Frederic Raphael and Joseph Epstein corresponded via the Internet for an entire year — though they had never met or even spoken to each other. The result is Distant Intimacy: A Friendship in the Age of the Internet (Yale University Press), a set of "electronic" letters that entertains readers as much as when the topic is grave as when it is droll. Talking about their professional lives as writers, their families and hobbies, Raphael and Epstein draw the reader in with their entertaining tales. Assessments of figures such as Annie Leibovitz, Harold Bloom, George Steiner, Isaiah Berlin and Robert Gottlieb, among others, are scattered throughout. New York Times columnist Bruce Feiler set out with these two questions: "What do happy families do right, and how can the rest of us learn to make our families hap- pier?" The father of twin daughters, Feiler found the answers often came from sur- prising sources and with advice contrary to what we have always been taught. In his book The Secrets of Happy Families (William Morrow), Feiler offers a play- book of suggestions and tips to make your family happier. Talking to various sources — from finance managers about how to manage allowance to members of Silicon Valley to figure out how to improve family efficiency — Feller provides a toolkit for the new generation of families, along with anecdotes from his own family's testing of these tips, like this one: Don't worry about family dinner. Instead, focus on finding time every day to be together; it's what you talk about, not what you eat, that matters. East Lansing native Nate Silver is a sta- tistics genius. At the age of 25, he invented a system called PECOTA for predicting baseball performances. In 2008, he suc- cessfully predicted the presidential elec- tion. In 2012, he predicted Barack Obama's re-election, forecasting the exact number of electoral votes for both Obama and Mitt Romney, as well as forecasting the popular vote with only a 0.7 percent margin of error. His book, The Signal and the Noise (Penguin), explains why some predictions succeed and others fail in regard to topics such as the weather, stock market, NBA and poker. Silver shows how to filter out the excess from what's truly important to make accurate predictions. As David Nirenberg shows in Anti- Judaism: The Western Tradition (Norton), anti-Jewish thought has been influencing Western society for centuries, going back to Egypt in the third century B.C.E., with Egyptian historian Manetho, who is thought to have created the first anti-Jewish cosmology, which influenced many of the anti-Jewish ideologies to fol- low. Nirenberg takes the reader across the Western world, from the founding of Christianity and Islam, to the Spanish Inquisition, to the German Holocaust. Even during times when there were no Jews present in a society, there was still anti-Jewish thought; and when Jews were present, they suffered from violence and oppression. Delving deeply into history, Nirenberg also shows that anti-Jewish thought in the Western world is not con- fined to radicals. In the work world nowadays, dress codes are relaxed, and technology is a constant distractor. Judith Martin, the author of the "Miss Manners" columns, along with her son, executive Nicholas Ivor Martin, attempt to create a guide to the modern workplace in their book, Miss Manners Minds Your Business (Norton). Written in question-and-answer format, with Miss Manners answering questions from her "Gentle Readers:' this volume provides everything a working person should know about — from after-hours work parties to your coworker's messy cubicle. Throughout history, many crime cases remain unsolved. In The Annals of Unsolved Crime (Melville House), Edward Jay Epstein tries to figure out logical solu- tions to some of them. Through usage of recorded evidence, eyewitness accounts, police testimonies and more, Epstein stag- es the crime and poses logical theories of what could have happened. From there, he presents which scenario he believes is the truth, backing up his reasoning with the evidence. The cases he looks at range from the assassination of Abraham Lincoln to the Amanda Knox ordeal. Humor is a time-honored tradition of modern Jewish culture, one that Ruth R. Wisse explores in her new book, No Joke: Making Jewish Humor (Princeton University Press). In German, Russian, Hebrew, English and Yiddish, Wisse traces Jewish humor around the world, and how it impacts the culture where it is found. However, this book isn't just a joke book. As Wisse shows the joys of Jewish humor, she also poses deep questions, such as, "Is `leave 'em laughing' the wisest motto for a people that others have intended to sweep off the stage of history?" Sidney Schwartz is a consultant to synagogues and other Jewish organiza- tions. In Jewish Megatrends: Charting the Course of the American Jewish Future (Jewish Lights), he offers a vision for a community that can simultaneously strengthen the institutions that serve those who seek greater Jewish identification and at the same attract younger Jews, many of whom are not particularly preoccupied with issues like intermarriage and anti- Semitism. Cooked (Penguin) by Michael Pollan explores the one thing we depend upon in some way in our daily lives: cooking. Traveling from the Basque country of Spain to barbeque pits in North Carolina, Pollan views different cultures and foods and asks the question: "Why does cooking matter?" Michael Moss, a Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter, takes readers on an adventure to discover what's really in the food we eat, and how companies make us want that food, in his book Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us (Random House). Moss covers the American food market unflinchingly, for- ever changing the way you'll think about the food you eat. After he received a pre-diabetic, pre- heart disease health diagnosis, it was sug- gested to New York Times food columnist Mark Bittman that he should become a vegan. For Bittman, whose career centers on food, this was not a viable option. Instead, he came up with a different plan: "Vegan Before 6," or "VB6," in which Summer Reading on page 54 June 27 • 2013 53