arts&life books THE HOLOCAUST ISRAEL/JUDAISM • Sylvia Ruth Gutmann is one of the youngest survivors of the Holocaust. Her family was murdered when she was 3 and she emigrated to the U.S. when she was 7, moving in with an uncle and aunt who insisted she put the past behind her. But she had one haunting memory, of her mother boarding a train and leav- ing her behind. In A Life Rebuilt: The Remarkable Transformation of a War Orphan (Epigraph Books), Gutmann traces her past as her life comes full circle. • The Oxford Illustrated History of the Third Reich (Oxford University Press), edited by Robert Gellately, provides a deep look into the rise of the Nazis through art, propaganda and rare photographs. From the Third Reich’s rise to its collapse in 1945, this book shows an era that for- ever changed the modern world. • In Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor (Harper), American-born author Yossi Klein Halevi writes 10 lyrical, provocative letters, sharing his passion for his adopted homeland of Israel and why he refuses to despair of peace between Israelis and Palestinians. • When New York Times editor Jonathan Weisman was attacked on Twitter by a wave of neo-Nazis and anti-Semites, he began to wonder how the Jewish experi- ence has changed, especially under a leader like Donald Trump. In Semitism: Being Jewish in America in the Age of Trump (St. Martin’s Press), he explores the disconnect between his own sense of Jewish identity and the expectations of his detractors and supporters, showing how hatred can slowly and quietly chew for kids and their families facing serious illness or potentially life limiting illness,” to make sure that the care is in line with the family’s values. He returns to the United States to do a specialized fellow- ship and comes back to Hadassah with the hope of continuing that work in Israel. But that didn’t work out as Hadassah was facing seri- ous financial and other difficulties. He then made the tough decision to return to America. Hadassah has since disas- sembled the pediatric oncology unit, a move he felt to be “extremely shortsighted and stubborn, depriving Jerusalem of a real gem.” All the senior doctors resigned. Now married and the father of a young son, Waldman lives in Chicago, where he is associate chief, division of pediatric pallia- tive care, at the Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. Usually, he travels to Israel twice a year to see family (both of his siblings live there as do his parents, who made aliyah after he did), and to work on a project he’s involved with at Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem. Still, his dream is to set up a pediatric palliative care service in Israel. Does he think about returning to Israel? “Every day,” he says. “I would do it if a philanthropist came up with the money to fund a program.” Thinking ahead, he reflects on his patients who get a terrible diag- nosis and then set off on a journey, “knowing they will be transformed and having faith that there will be meaning in all of that.” • MEMOIR/BIOGRAPHY • Leonard Bernstein — com- poser of On the Town and West Side Story, chief conductor of the New York Philharmonic, TV star, humanitarian and the life of every party — was also a dad. In Famous Father Girl: A Memoir of Growing Up Bernstein (Harper), his eldest daughter, Jamie Bernstein, invites us into her family’s private world, where Lenny (who would have celebrated his 100th birthday on Aug. 25) taught his daughter to love the world in all its beauty and complexity. • Historian and thinker Gershom Scholem pioneered the study of Jewish mysticism and profoundly influenced the Zionist movement. In Gershom Scholem: Master of the Kabbalah (Yale), David Biale traces his life through embracing Zionism as the vehicle for the renewal of Judaism in a secular age, his participation in the creation of the Hebrew University and a life spanning two world wars, the rise of Nazism and the Holocaust. • Ilana Kurshan finds herself alone in Jerusalem after emerg- ing from a painful divorce. Struggling to find meaning, a friend suggests she takes up daf yomi — reading one page of the Talmud each day. If All the Seas Were Ink (St. Martin’s Press) is Kurshan’s tale of find- ing balance and rebuilding a life after a painful episode. • By his own estimation, liter- ary and political intellectual Lionel Trilling wrote up to 600 letters a year. When he died in 1975, his obituary, on the front page of the New York Times, said, “In the hands of Lionel Trilling, criticism became not merely a consideration of a work of literature but also of the ideas it embodied and what these ideas said of the society that gave them birth. Criticism was a moral function …” For Life in Culture: Selected Letters of Lionel Trilling (Farrar, Straus and Giroux; due September 2018), Adam Kirsch culled the thousands of letters penned between 1924 and 1975 down to a couple hundred, pro- viding an intimate glimpse into Trilling’s life and times. • Seymour Stein grew up in World War II-era Brooklyn, away at the moral fabric of society. • The story of Jews coming to America is the focus of Steven R. Weisman’s The Chosen Wars: How Judaism Became an American Religion (Simon & Schuster; due August 2018), starting with the Diaspora arriving in New Amsterdam in 1654. Weisman chronicles the struggles and triumphs Jews faced in the 18th and 19th centuries, and how Judaism adapt- ed to the New World. rushing home from shul to hear the weekly rundown of the Top 25 music chart. In Siren Song: My Life in Music (St. Martin’s Press), Stein tells of 60 years in the music busi- ness, as the founder of Sire Records, as a pioneer of New Wave music — discovering Madonna, the Ramones, the Cure, Lou Reed, Squeeze and more. Full of hilarious scenes and big personalities, the story also discusses the slow accep- tance of diversity in America and the violent death of his ex-wife Linda Stein, a high- powered real estate broker to the stars. “Sixty-plus years in the music business,” he writes, “and I keep hearing the same old groan: that pop music isn’t what it used to be. But the truth is there’s always great stuff happening. You just have to go out and find it.” • In 1886 New York, the Statue of Liberty stood unlit and unloved by American politicians. Nearby, actor M.B. Curtis was achieving over- night success as one of the nation’s top actors in a play that transcended common stereotypes of Jewish charac- jn ters at the time. The Jewish actor, an immigrant who grew up in Detroit (his fam- ily, the Strelingers, remained in the city), came to the aid of Lady Liberty. In The Man Who Lit Lady Liberty: The Extraordinary Rise and Fall of Actor M.B. Curtis (Heydey), historian Richard Schwartz rescues Curtis’ story from the dusty archives of forgotten his- tory. • Shaul Mayzlish’s The Rabbinate in Stormy Days: The Life and Teachings of Rabbi Yitzhak Isaac HaLevi Herzog, First Chief Rabbi of Israel (Gefen Publishing House) tells the story of Rabbi Yitzhak Isaac HaLevi Herzog. F rom his youth in Poland, to his days in the new Jewish state, the rabbi was a person of faith who maintained a mod- ern life. June 21 • 2018 45