A Jazz Story LITTLE BLAC LIES MUSIC IS FOREVER A local man writes a book about his friendship with Dizzy Gillespie. the Garden (Ecco, an imprint of Harper Collins, Aug. 18), which brings alive the tumult of early 20th-century Iran and the complex, tragic history of a wealthy fam- ily of Persian Jews. The suspenseful novel highlights a crisis of inheritance and offers a poetic, intimate view of young women bound by the confines of an oppressive male-dominated society. The main character is Rakhel, a barren young bride, whose husband makes a fate- ful choice that will shatter the household and drive Rakhel to dark extremes to save herself and preserve her status within the family. The story is inspired by events in the author's own family and is told through the eyes of the family's only sur- viving daughter. ■Former U.S. diplomat (who handled Holocaust issues in Poland) and bestsell- ing author (The Kommandant's Girl and The Diplomat's Wife) Pam Jenoff turns her focus from wartime Europe to stateside in the forthcoming The Last Summer at Chelsea Beach (Mira Books; Aug. 2015). Following a young refugee from Fascist Italy, newly arrived in America, Jenoff tells of the girl's summer by the sea, her affec- tion for the boisterous Irish-Catholic boys next door, the oncoming creep of war and finding her way home. ■NY Times bestselling author and host of a hit A&E H2 history series, Brad Meltzer is out with his latest novel, The President's Shadow (Grand Central Publishing), a taut political conspiracy thriller. The novel delves into little-known parts of American history to reveal gov- ernment cover-ups, secret military loca- tions and the key to national archivist Beecher White's father's untimely death while in the Navy special unit called the Plankholders. Meltzer, a University of Michigan alum, has strong connections to the Detroit area. A Jewish-American author who embraces this identity in his work and public life, Meltzer delivers yet another high-energy page turner. ■"In the moment after Robert Mason's condom broke he rolled off me, propped himself on his elbow, and said, 'What you do doesn't help anybody"' So opens The Sunlit Night (Bloomsbury USA), Rebecca Dinerstein's debut novel, which follows Lofoten, her bilingual English-Norwegian collection of poems. Frances has arrived in summertime Lofoten, six tiny islands in the Norwegian Sea where sun is a constant, to recover from a sudden breakup, taking refuge at an artists' colony. At the same time, Yasha arrives to bury his Russian immigrant father. What they find "at the top of the world:' in each other and themselves, yields hope and surprises for both. ■Benjamin Markovits' new novel, You Don't Have to Live Like This (Harper), is a big, daring and prescient work set in the racially charged landscape of con- temporary Detroit. The protagonist, Greg Marnier, finds purpose in a new venture to gentrify five square miles in a burnt-out and half-abandoned black neighborhood in Detroit. He tries to make a home in the new biracial community, but things go ter- ribly wrong when a black teenager is criti- cally injured in a vigilante act by a white man. Markovits raises urgent questions about the future of a once-great American city, the state of race relations and the wid- ening gap between rich and poor. plex, touching life. "The streets are dirty, but they're home, and they're beautiful to me. If you can't see the beauty in the dirt, then I feel sorry for you:' ■Sydney and Violet Schiff were trendsetters in the Modernist liter- ary movement of early-20th-century England, friends with T.S. Eliot, James Joyce, Marcel Proust and Pablo Picasso. In Sydney and Violet (Anchor Books), Stephen Klaidman tells how this power couple overcame snobbery and anti-Sem- itism to help bring artistic genius to light. ■In The Archive Thief (Oxford University Press), Lisa Moses Leff recon- structs the story of Zosa Szajkowski, a man "who salvaged French Jewish his- tory in the wake of the Holocaust" We get his life from humble beginnings to refugee scholar, who illicitly moved tens of thousands of documents from Nazi buildings and public archives to New York. Leff gives a welcomed insight into the debates over the ownership of the archives and the struggles to preserve remnants of our Jewish past, based on the question of whether such actions were unethical acts or a desperate bid to save Jewish culture from destruction. SUMMER READIN on page 34 Suzanne Chessler 1 Contributing Writer ave Usher grew up amid a family business of recycling motor oil and a family inter- est encouraging attention to clas- sical music. In his 80s, Usher still is at the helm of cleaning up oil, only in waterways, but he long ago switched his musical priorities to jazz. Being a fan wasn't enough. Since connecting with jazz trumpeter and bandleader Dizzy Gillespie after a Detroit show in the 1940s, Usher traveled to watch the acclaimed musician perform and went on to establish himself as a record producer, moving beyond the star he most admired. Usher's recollections — centered on both friendship and a business relationship with the musician — are chronicled in a book co-written with Berl Falbaum, who also details Usher's work heading up Marine Pollution Control operating out of Detroit. Music Is Forever: Dizzy, the Jazz Legend, and Me (Red Anchor Productions; $17.95) came to be after 20 years of coaxing by Falbaum, who had done public-rela- tions assignments for Usher. The two quickly established a work routine. Falbaum would inter- view Usher on tape recordings, research additional information and write up the material. The editing was done by Usher, who relied on Falbaum's experience writing for newspapers and developing longer works of fiction and nonfiction. "Dave was mentioned in Dizzy's book, but the relationship was not developed," Falbaum explains about his interest in starting the project. "I thought their relationship [last- ing until Dizzy's death in 1993] was important jazz history and should be saved along with important Detroit history involving jazz. "We started almost three years ago with six months of interviews. I used Dizzy's book and books about Dizzy to flesh out the facts. I also did research in presidential librar- ies because Dizzy and Dave went to D Dizzy Gillespie, the Jazz Legend, and Me Dave Usher with Bed Firm the White House a few times." When musician met fan, Gillespie was 25 and Usher was 14. Usher's interest in jazz had been piqued by listening to his brother's record col- lection. "Within that music, I started to feel excited about what I was hear- ing and what Dizzy was doing," Usher says. "As a result, I became an advocate." The racial segregation of the times did not impact the way Usher and Gillespie got along. "We had a simpatico," says Usher, who lives in Downtown Detroit. "I lived in a mixed Detroit neighborhood where there were people who didn't like Jews. "As it was for the Jews, it was for the blacks, and our relationship was easy. I had no barriers with black people, and he had the same kind of understanding of life that I had. We were able to work and cre- ate together." Usher, who started his first record company in 1948 and has been involved with other compa- nies after that, traveled to foreign countries as Gillespie performed. In the midst of all his travels, Usher celebrated his bar mitzvah in 2013 — on a plane, where he sat next to and met a rabbi. Usher also is chairman of the marine business operated by his son, Charles, as president. Besides meeting American presidents as part of working with Gillespie, Usher was called upon by President George H.W. Bush to help clean up millions of gallons of oil that Saddam Hussein spilled into the Persian Gulf during Desert Storm in 1991. The book has been released by Usher's current recording enter- prise that included Gillespie on the board of directors. ❑ July 16 • 2015 33