arts & entertainment >> on the cover Our annual summer reading roundup offers more than 100 recent titles — all with a Jewish connection. Enjoy! tea BM& Gail Zimmerman Arts Editor fiction Aharon Appelfeld's latest novel, Suddenly, Love (Pantheon), is the story of a lonely older man making his way from Ukraine to Israel after World War II and his devoted young caretaker, the daughter of Holocaust survivors; together, they transform each other's lives in unex- pected ways. In I Am Abraham: A Novel of Lincoln and the Civil War (Liveright), Jerome Charyn, using biblically cadenced prose, cornpone 19th-century humor and Lincoln's own letters and speeches, brings the 16th president to life, in first person, as a profoundly moral but troubled man, seized by melancholy and imbued with an unfaltering sense of human worth. Prolific mystery/thriller writer Harlan Coben (the author, whose grandfather was born in Jerusalem, lists his favorite author as Philip Roth) is out with two new works: In Missing You (Dutton Adult), NYPD Det. Kat Donovan sees a photo of her ex-fiance on a dating site and soon finds herself in the middle of Internet fraud, psychos and her cop dad's unsolved murder; Six Years (Signet; paperback) follows a college professor's search for answers when "the woman who got away" turns out to be not who he thought she was (Hugh Jackman has signed on for the film version). In No Book but the World (Riverhead), Leah Hager Cohen writes about estranged siblings: Ava and her younger brother, Fred. As Ava embarks on a journey to understand her brother and herself, her husband grapples with their marriage, and her jailed brother relives his crime. 0, Africa! (Hogarth), Andrew Lewis Conn's sweeping historical adventure, with brotherhood and forbidden love playing out against the backdrop of the birth of the movies, digs into the sepa- rate cultures of Jews, gays and African Americans in the early 20th century and how they intersect yet remain outside the mainstream. Part of the plot includes Jewish twin brothers who attempt the first studio film made in Africa. In Yvette Manessis Corporon's first novel, When the Cypress Whispers (HarperCollins), an American-born daughter of Greek immigrants learns of her grandmother's role in helping save a family of Corfu Jews during World War II; it is based on stories the author heard from her own grandmother. Elizabeth de Waal's (1899-1991) pre- viously unpublished novel, The Exiles Return (Picador), is a postwar story of Austria's fallen aristocrats, unrepentant Nazis and a culture degraded by violence. In Andrew's Brain (Random House), E.L. Doctorow, author of the sweeping Ragtime saga, goes into the mind of one man, a cognitive-science professor, as he grapples in a dialogue with his therapist over issues including memory, conscious- ness and perception. The Train to Warsaw (Grove Atlantic), by Gwen Edelman, delves into the psyches of Jascha and Lilke, who sur- vived the Warsaw Ghetto, and upon their return to Poland must cope with both the brutal force of history and their own self- destructive tendencies. Joshua Max Feldman's debut novel, The Book of Jonah (Henry Holt), is a retelling of the biblical story with a young, ambitious Manhattan lawyer named Jonah Jacobstein at its center, who deals with love, failure and unexpected faith while asking an age-old question: How do you know if you're chosen? In The Angel of Losses (Harper Collins; July 29), Stephanie Feldman inter- weaves history, theology and both real and imagined Jewish folktales. When Eli Burke dies, he leaves behind a mysterious notebook full of stories about a magical figure named the White Rebbe, a miracle worker in league with the enigmatic Angel of Losses, protector of things gone astray and guardian of the lost letter of the alphabet, which completes the secret name of God. When his granddaughter Marjorie discovers Eli's notebook, every- thing she thought she knew about her grandfather — and her family — comes undone. In Boris Fishman's at-once funny and heart-wrenching literary debut, A Replacement Life (Harper), failed jour- nalist Slava Gelman becomes the "Forger of South Brooklyn," faking Holocaust res- titution claims for old Russian Jews living in New York. Judith Frank's forthcoming novel, All I Love and Know (William Morrow; July 15), set against the backdrop of timely issues including Israel/Palestine, gay marriage and international adoption, tells the story of how Daniel Rosen and Matthew Green's quiet, domestic life in Northhampton, Mass., is completely shaken when Daniel's twin, Joel, and sister-in-law die in the bombing of a Jerusalem cafe, leaving their two children to the couple. Alan Furst's Midnight in Europe (Random House), a new historical thrill- er, is a tale of spies and secret operatives in Paris, New York, Warsaw and Odessa on the eve of World War II. Susan Jane Gilman's The Ice Cream Queen of Orchard Street (Grand Central Publishing) tells the story of Malka Treynovsky, who flees Russia with her family in 1913 and is abandoned by them on the streets of the Lower East Side when she becomes crippled. Taken in by a tough-loving Italian ices peddler, she survives through cunning and inventive- ness, learning the secrets of his trade and, over a 70-year period, transforming her- self into the doyenne of an empire of ice cream franchises. Myra Gold is a Manhattan psychother- apist, a quick study and excellent judge of character in Lisa Gornick's Tinderbox (Sarah Crichton Books/Farrar, Straus & Giroux). She thinks she knows what she is getting into when she hires a nanny, Eva, to aid the household when her pho- bia-addled son, his wife and their child move in with her. But when Eva settles into Myra's patient chair, their relation- ship becomes too close, too dependent and, ultimately, terrifyingly destructive. In Friendship (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; July 1), by Emily Gould, longtime friends Bev Tunney and Amy Schein, both turn- ing 30, are dragged, kicking and scream- ing, into real adulthood; they have to face the possibility that growing up might mean growing apart. In her award-winning debut novel, All Russians Love Birch Trees (Other Press), translated from the German by Eva Bacon and set in Frankfurt and then Israel, "I find television very educational. Every time someone turns the set on, Igo into the other room and read a book." — Groucho Marx Page Turners on page 56 June 26 • 2014 55