arts & entertainment Page Turners from page 57 "To read is to voyag through time." - Carl Sa of New Yorker film critic David Denby) uses letters, emails, memos, legal filings and depositions (most from the young, female, French Jewish lawyer represent- ing the wife). Jewish author M.J. Rose has made a name for herself with her "reincarna- tion" novels (The Book of Lost Fragrances, Seduction). In The Collector of Dying Breaths (Atria), she alternates between 16th-century and 21st-century France as a modern-day woman seeks to unlock Catherine de Medici's perfumer's secret to immortality. The World of Rae English (Black Lawrence Press), by U-M grad Lucy Rosenthal, is set in the Mad Men era and tells the story of a young woman who is recovering from a marriage to a disgraced politician; abandoning New York for the University of Iowa's Writers Workshop, she hopes to find herself as a writer and seek romance in the heart- land. In Daniel Silva's new thriller, The Heist (Harper; July 15), Israeli art restorer and occasional spy Gabriel Allon searches for a stolen masterpiece by Caravaggio. Maddy Freed, an up-and-coming actress, and Steven Weller, her older, pos- sibly closeted, mega-successful producer husband, are the main characters in Amy Sohn's new novel, The Actress (Simon and Schuster; July 1), which explores the price of ambition, the treachery of love and the roles we all play. A couple plan for low-key nuptials and get anything but in A Wedding in Provence (Ballantine), Ellen Sussman's novel of love, forgiveness and trust set among the beaches and vineyards of southern France. In Love and Treasure (Knopf), Ayelet Waldman, inspired by the story of the Hungarian Gold Train in World War II, offers a suspenseful his- torical novel and love story that moves between eras as a granddaughter hon- ors her grandfather's life. Michael Wex's (the nonfiction Born to Kvetch) first novel, Shlepping the Exile (St. Martin's Press), is a satiric take on a tale about a Chasidic boy 58 June 26 • 2014 and his refugee parents making new lives in the Canadian Rockies. In Jennifer Weiner's All Fall Down (Atria), Allison Weiss has a handsome husband, an adorable little girl, a job she loves and a big house in the suburbs. On the other hand, the prescription medicine her doctors give her to make it through the day (her husband is becom- ing distant, her daughter is acting out, her father has early Alzheimer's and her mother can barely cope) may be turning into her biggest problem of all. In The Belief in Angels (She Writes Press), by J. Dylan Yates, two wounded souls, Jules Finn (who grew up in a cha- otic hippie household and has recently lost her brother) and her grandfather Samuel Trautman (an Orthodox Jew who survived the Ukrainian pogroms of the 1920s as well as a World War II death camp) undergo experiences that could only be explained as Divine intervention. Set on the eve of the Second World War, The Last Train to Paris (Europa Editions), by Michele Zackheim, tells of a half-Jewish American reporter in Paris who undertakes an assignment in the Berlin press office and is forced to grapple with her hidden identity as Jew. Short Storia Molly Antopol's debut collection, The UnAmericans (W.W. Norton), moving from the U.S. to Israel to Soviet Russia and back again, explores characters shaped by the forces of history: an actor phased out of Hollywood for his Communist ties, an Israeli soldier who comes of age when his brother is maimed on their communal farm, a gallerist who begins smuggling paintings out of Moscow and curating underground shows in her Jerusalem home. Israeli Knesset member Ruth Calderon, who has a doctorate in Talmud, retells talmudic stories as imaginative fiction in A Bride for One Night: Talmud Tales (Jewish Publication Society), translated into English by Ilana Kurshan. In Many Seconds into the Future: Ten Stories (Texas Tech University Press), John J. Clayton focuses on family as the "Books may well be the only true magic." - Alice Hoffman N characters — most of them Jewish — grapple with questions of living, dying, loving and worshiping. Actor/writer B.J. Novak's (The Office) well-reviewed collection of short stories, One More Thing: Stories and Other Stories (Knopf), mined from his standup routines and riffing on everything from sex robots to the ghost of Mark Twain, imagines a blind date with a warlord, a Comedy Central TV roast of Nelson Mandela and a mortify- ing misunderstanding between novelist John Grisham and his new editor. The Harvard graduate's father co-edited The Big Book of Jewish Humor. Last year's 100th anniversary of New York City's Grand Central Terminal was the impetus for Grand Central: Original Stories of Postwar Love and Reunion (Berkley trade paperback; July 1), which gathers stories from 10 writers who, inspired by the iconic New York landmark, have created their own stories, set on the same day just after the end of World War II in a time of hope, uncertainty, change and renewal. Jewish authors include Pam Jenoff and Alyson Richman. Menwira The Tailors of Tomaszow (Texas Tech University Press), a "collective memoir" by Rena Margulies Chernoff and Alan Chernoff, recalls the annihilated Jewish community of Tomaszow-Mazowiecki, Poland, in a narrative told by one of the younger survivors of the Holocaust, as well as through firsthand accounts of other Tomaszow survivors. Avery Corman, who wrote Kramer vs. Kramer and Oh, God!, is out with a new memoir, My Old Neighborhood Remembered (Barricade Books), an urban history of growing up in the Bronx of the 1940s and '50s in a neighborhood culture that has since vanished. "Think before you speak. Read before you think." - Fran Lebowitz 16P Graphic In Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant? (Bloomsbury U.S.A.), the New Yorker's Roz Chast offers a prickly but funny graphic memoir about dealing with her aging parents. Liana Finck's A Bintel Brief: Love and Longing in Old New York (Ecco) turns the popular advice column for new immigrants that appeared in the Yiddish Forward newspaper into a non- fiction graphic novel. Photo- Dock In Fictitious Dishes: An Album of Literature's Most Memorable Meals (HarperCollins), author Dinah Fried photographs 50 re-creations of literature's most famous meals from contemporary and classic novels. Poet/ q In her latest volume, And Short the Season (W.W. Norton), former U.S. poet laureate Maxine Kumin, who died earlier this year, focuses on the natural world. Jewish themes are sometimes reflected in her work. The Wherewithal (W. W. Norton) is Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Philip Schultz's new novel written in verse, about a young man hiding in a San Francisco basement to avoid the Vietnam War, who translates his mother's World War II wartime diaries of Poland. Deborah Feldman, author of the best-selling Unorthodox, follows up with Exodus: A Memoir (Blue Rider Press), continuing her narrative of her life story since she rejected the clois- tered Satmar community in which she was raised; similarly, Leah Vincent, in Cut Me Loose: Sin and Salvation After My Ultra-Orthodox Girlhood (Nan A. Talese), writes about her promiscuous and self-destructive spiral after being cast out of her ultra-Orthodox Jewish family. In The Late Starters Orchestra (Algonquin), former New York Times reporter Ari L. Goldman (The Search for God at Harvard) guides readers through his midlife journey as he takes up the cello after 25 years. Pilgrim: Risking the Life I Have to Find the Faith I Seek (Hudson Street Press), by Lee Kravitz, is a memoir of the author's mission to rediscover his lost spirituality; he "samples" the tradi- tions of many religions as he seeks to fulfill his yearnings for a contemplative life connected with God. Actress Lee Grant, born Lyova Haskell Rosenthal, details her experiences in I Said Yes to Everything (Blue Rider Press; July 8) — from the New York the- ater scene of the '50s to landing on the Hollywood blacklist to her return to star- dom and star-studded parties in 1970s Malibu.