arts & life Dramatic Debug Michigan native gives in to her gift for young-adult fiction. these GENTLE WOUNDS HELENE DUNBAR Celebrity Jews I Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News AT THE MOVIES Opening this week: Michael Mann, 71, directs and writes taut and visually exciting thrillers (Miami Vice, Heat) — so his latest film, Blackhat, will likely be quite a ride among international crime movies. It follows a furloughed convict (Chris Hemsworth) as he and his Chinese partners hunt a high-level cybercrime network across America and into China and Indonesia. On the lighter side, The Wedding 38 January 15 • 2015 I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer elene Dunbar wants readers to join her in the heads of her pro- tagonists, a place she finds very compelling. In These Gentle Wounds (Flux; $9.99), young-adult novelist Dunbar writes from the perspec- tive of teenage Gordie, the only survivor of his mother's attempt to drown herself along with the youngest four of her five children. "With the exception of what I'm drafting now, I've always written in the first person:' says Dunbar, 49. "I think for most young-adult literature, first person is the most gripping. With Gordie's story in particular, the reader needs to be as close to his pain as possible to really understand it:' Dunbar, describing emotional pain, has developed a plot with brief respites from tension. Gordie, living with his half-broth- er and the half-brother's dad, finds first love, but the reappearance of his brutal father causes severe surges of anger. "Childhood trauma actually changes brain chemistry:' says Dunbar, whose novel places Gordie's traumatic experience years earlier in Michigan, her own home state. "I think a lot of people talk about military PTSD [Post Traumatic Stress Disorder], but they don't talk about the trauma children live through due to abuse and what that does to the rest of Ringer is a romantic comedy starring Josh Gad (the voice of Olaf in Frozen), 33, as Doug, a loveable but socially awkward guy. As the film opens, Doug is two weeks away from marrying his "dream girl" (Katey Cuoco, aka Sweeting of Big Bang Theory fame), but he has no best man. He is referred to Jimmy (Kevin Hart), who runs a service that provides flattering best men. Jimmy himself takes on the job, and the two guys bond. Ringer was co-written 13 years ago by the film's their lives:' Dunbar, raised in her teen years by her dad, Harold Baker, after the death of her mother, started writing as a youngster. Her enthu- siasm grew while attending Oak Park High School and earning a bachelor's degree from Kalamazoo College. "I always wanted to write, but not fiction:' says Dunbar, who was the editor of her high school and college newspapers. "I wanted to focus on drama criticism:' She became an English major with a theater concentration, and in her senior year, won the National College Theater Festival's Student Critics Competition. Although she found work as a critic for the Chicago Reader, she explored higher-paying market- ing as she moved to New York. Sometimes, she was able to extend marketing work to include editing organizational publications. Dunbar has had a variety of freelance assignments, includ- ing writing about Susan Smith, who is serving life in prison after strapping her children into a car and driving into a river. She con- nected with the Gale Group (later Cengage) in Farmington Hills and developed religious projects for Women of Reform Judaism and B'nai Jeshurun synagogue in New York City. "I was pretty much convinced I couldn't write fiction, but my col- lege roommate, who's published a number of books, kept saying I should try," she recalls. "I had been writing for a director, Yale graduate Jeremy Garelick, 39. In 2006, he and his writing partner, Jay Lavender, had a hit with The Break-Up, starring Jennifer Aniston. Back in 2006, Garelick revealed that he had Gad recently become a very observant Jew and that he was about to marry a "nice Jewish girl" (I checked, he is still married to her). Most amusing was his recollection of Garel ick his mother appear- the couple had settled in New York, Dunbar interviewed with the owner of a record label in Nashville, so they headed to Tennessee, where her husband works as a facilities manager at Vanderbilt University. And last year, the couple adopted a 5-year- old girl from Bulgaria. While promoting These Gentle Wounds, Dunbar also holds two part-time jobs, including the , development of publications for Congregation Ohabai Sholom in Nashville (she attended Congregation Beth Achim while living in Michigan). "I write in a very disorganized way:' says Dunbar, who recently appeared at the Southern Festival of Books. "I can input ideas into my phone while I'm at the gro- cery store:' In preparing for the release of What Remains, Dunbar thinks about Gordie, whose story derives from her research about Smith as well as other articles about murders perpetrated by victims' mothers. "When I finished the book, it was hard to get this kid out of my head:' she says. "His voice was very clear to me. I never had a question about what he would do in certain circumstances. "But his head was not an easy place to be. I spent a lot of time at online forums, reading posts of what people were facing. It's amazing how people manage to hide a lot of what they're going through. I wanted to make sure this was right:' ❑ t3 Helene Dunbar magazine in Ireland, covering traditional Irish music in New York City. I kept telling her stories about musicians, and she said I had enough to write a novel:' Picking up Melissa Marr's Wicked Lovely series for young adults, Dunbar then wrote a story about Irish musicians. As fic- tion became a priority, she began meeting with a group of young writers to critique one another's drafts. The result of those sessions became her third book, What Remains, which will be released next May. Dunbar's fourth book, These Gentle Wounds, was the first sold, and has been named among the best in BuzzFeed's Young Adult category for 2014. The novelist met her husband, John, while visiting Ireland to con- fer with an editor. "He is Scottish and had been living in England so I moved there she recalls. Later, after ing at all his high-school foot- ball games holding up a sign that read: "Be careful, tatele." However, since 2006, Garelick has been listed as the director or writer of a number of films that never got made, as is often the way of Hollywood. He recently told Variety (which named him a "director to watch") that Screen Gems asked him to direct Ringer just after Diaz another film of his got canceled. A JEWISH WEDDING? Cameron Diaz and musi- cian Benji Madden (guitarist and singer for the Madden Brothers and Good Charlotte) do not have any Jewish ancestry. So, what are we to make of a Jan. 6 US Weekly article, with- out an author name, that says that all sort of Jewish wed- ding customs (under a chuppah, stepping on the glass) were present in the cou- ple's Jan. 5 wedding ceremony? Be skep- tical of media outlets that say this ceremony was a harbinger of "kosher-style" weddings for non-Jews. ❑