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5600 Crooks Rd. (North of Long Lake Rd.) Troy, MI • 248-813-0700
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70
December 11 • 2014
More
Nonfiction
In
Thirteen Days in September:
Carter, Begin and Sadat at Camp
David (Knopf), Pulitzer Prize-
winning author Lawrence Wright
provides a day-by-day account of the
1978 Camp David conference, based,
in part, on extensive interviews with
President Jimmy Carter and his wife,
Rosalynn. That peace treaty — the
first in the modern Middle East —
endures.
Not Fade Away: A Memoir of
Senses Lost and Found (Gotham
Books) by Rebecca Alexander is the
powerful memoir of a young woman
slowly losing her sight and hearing
because of Usher Syndrome III, a rare
disorder. Now 34, Alexander is a psy-
chotherapist, athlete and volunteer;
she writes candidly, with no self-pity,
about the disease's progression, cur-
rent research into a cure, the chal-
lenges in her life and gratitude for the
beauty she has experienced.
A collection of essays culled from
four decades of work, Daphne
Merkin's The Fame Lunches: On
Wounded Icons, Money, Sex, the
Brontes, and the Importance of
Handbags (Farrar Straus Giroux)
includes her reflections — always
filled with remarkable candor and
insight — on many subjects, from
literary profiles to her Orthodox back-
ground.
Two new books in the Jewish Lives
series published by Yale University
Press, reveal lions in their fields.
Leonard Bernstein: American
Musician by Allen Shawn integrates
the composer's life and music. Shawn
focuses on the tremendous range of
Bernstein's compositions and his pub-
lic role as a celebrated conductor. Ben
Gurion: Father of Modern Israel by
Anita Shapira draws on previously
unused sources to get to the core of
the passionate, courageous, compli-
cated man who would become the face
of the new nation.
A biography, Herzl's Vision:
Theodor Herzl and the Foundation
of the Jewish State (BlueBridge)
by Shlomo Avineri, draws on the
Zionist leader's diaries and published
works, following his political and
spiritual journey to become an inter-
national figure.
Sarah Wildman's memoir,
Paper Love: Searching for the
Girl My Grandfather Left Behind
(Riverhead), details many discoveries
that grew out of Wildman's search for
a woman whose photo and letters she
found in her grandfather's files — this
was the girlfriend he left behind when
he fled Vienna in 1938. She also dis-
covered others searching for the same
woman.
In the memoir Timeless: Love,
Morgenthau, and Me (Farrar, Straus
and Giroux), Lucinda Franks,
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and
wife of Robert M. Morgenthau, long-
time district attorney for New York
(and the inspiration for D.A. Adam
Schiff on the original Law & Order)
and, at 95, the last surviving member
of the Kennedy-era glory days, pro-
vides an intimate account of her hus-
band and their unlikely (she's nearly
30 years younger) marriage.
Nationally syndicated Washington
Post columnist Richard Cohen,
in Israel: Is It Good for the Jews?
(Simon and Schuster), takes readers
on his own voyage of discovery of
where Israel came from, why it mat-
ters and the paradoxical role played by
anti-Semitism: It not only made Israel
necessary, he writes. It made Israel
possible.
In Hitler's First Victims: The
Beginning of the Holocaust
(Knopf), Timothy W. Ryback pro-
vides a historical narrative of the first
killing by SS guards at Dachau in 1933
and the investigations that followed.
He tells the story of Josef Hartinger,
the local Munich prosecutor who took
great risks to try to bring these first
killers to justice. His evidence was
later presented at the Nuremberg tri-
als.
In The Nazis Next Door: How
America Became a Safe Haven
for Hitler's Men (Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt), Pulitzer Prize-winning
New York Times investigative report-
er Eric Lichtblau traces the flight of
thousands of Nazis into America after
World War II and reveals new infor-
mation about a shameful but little-
known chapter in postwar history.
Such Good Girls: The Journey
of the Holocaust's Hidden Child
Survivors (Harper) by R.D. Rosen
provides a portal into the lives of