The Charlotte Jewish News - June-Juiy 2001 - Page 9 Speizman Jewish Library From the Librarian’s Desk By Amalia Warshenbrot, Librarian, Speizman Jewish Library Mah Nishtana? So, Mah Nishtana? How is this coming summer different from the past school year? In all of the past months, children were allowed to borrow ONE book for ONE week. This summer children may borrow up to THREE books for THREE weeks. In the past months the library was opened one night a week and on Sundays. This summer the library will be open four days a week (see hours below). During the past months borrow ers were unable to search books on our online catalog. This summer a part of our collection will be cata logued. In all of the past months our users had to wait a long time for books that were in high demand. This summer, thanks to many donations, we will be able to pur chase more than one copy of pop ular books. ^ Library Summer Hours Mondays and Thursdays: 9:00 AM to 12:30 PM and 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM Thesdays: Closed Wednesdays and Fridays: 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM The Following is a Small Sample of the Recent Additions to Our Book Collection This will be great reading for the summer. If you wish to reserve a book, please call 704-944-6763. The Big Silence; an Abe Lieberman mystery by Stuart M. Kaminsky The Family Orchard; a novel by Nomi Eve How I Came into My Inheritance; and other true stories by Dorothy Gallagher If I Told You Once; a novel by Judy Budnitz Never Nosh a Matzo Ball; a Ruby, the rabbi’s wife, mystery by Sharon Kahn Portrait of an Artist as an Old Man by Joseph Heller Ravelstein by Saul Bellow Setting Fires by Kate Wenner Six Figures by Fred Leebron The Spider's Web by Laura E. Williams Swimming Toward the Ocean; a novel by Carole L. Glickfeld ^ Recommended Reading for Those Long Summer Days We Welcome the Following who Joined the Friends of the Library Campaign Iwona and David Hopkins Ronna and Keith Pandres Rosalia and Benjamin Weiner We acknowledge with gratitnde the following donations to the: SPEIZMAN LIBRARY FUND In honor of the Bar Mitzvah of Alan Platock from Ruth and Jerry Hannes In honor of the Bat Mitzvah of Jordana Weiner from Ruth and Alan Goldberg CHERYL KATZ MEMORIAL LIBRARY FUND In memory of Elissa Joy Ennison Barman from Ellie and Ron Katz We apologize to Cheri and Marc Titlebaum for omitting their name from our acknowledgement of their donation to the Speizman Library Fund in appreciation of Randy DeFilipp, Susan Rabinovich, Lari Massachi, Claire Putterman, Linda Spil and Lisa Fischbeck. Thanks again for your continued - support of the Speizman Jewish Library, please accept my apology, By Rita Mond A View from My Rooftop: Reflections of an Inner Life by Renee Garfinkel, BIC Publishing, 525 14th St., #1115, Washington, DC, 184 pp. $12.95 (paperback). The author, turning 50, took a one year sabbatical during which she wrote this one year travel Jour nal that takes the reader through her heritage and spiritual inner life. To quote her: “I’m thinking a lot about religion lately. But, then, reli gion has always been an important tone in my life. Even when I was most distant from it, and most rebellious against it, Judaism per vaded my life. My consciousness is Jewish, just as surely as it is female. Today religion is hot in America, and Christianity and Buddhism seem to be vying for the public soul. The struggle between their messages make for an active backdrop against which to look at my own Judaism.” Rcncc Gart'mkd About the Author Renee Garfinkel received her Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University of Lund in Sweden in 1975. She joined the University of Pennsylvania Medical School faculty and the University Graduate Hospital as a psycholo gist with a specialty in Gerontology. She founded and edited “Adoption Quarterly,” the first peer reviewed academic jour nal in the field of adoption. In 1991, she joined the Red Cross dis aster mental health unit assigned to plane crashes and natural disaster sites. Living in Washington, DC, she has a private therapy practice there and is a member of the facul ty of George Washington University’s Institute for Crisis Disaster and Risk Management. Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland by Jan T. Gross, Princeton University Press, 41 William St., Princeton, N.J. 08540. 216 pp., 27 halftones, 3 maps. $12.95. This is not a book for the squea mish. It is the true story of what happened to the approximately 1,600 Jewish men, women and children who were murdered on July 10, 1941 in the town of Jedwabne, Poland (one half of the town’s population) by the very people whom they called their neighbors. Jedwabne’s Jews were clubbed, drowned, gutted and burned not by the faceless Nazis but by their former Polish school mates, by those who sold them food, bought their milk and were formerly on a friendly basis. Only seven of the 1,600 man aged to escape and live to tell the tale of what happened that sum mer’s eve. After the war, the near by family who saved them was derided and driven from the area. The single Jew offered mercy by the town declined it. This is a must for those especial ly interested in the Holocaust. The publication of this book has already “ruffled a good many feathers” and brought old tensions back to the fore. About the Author Jan T. Gross is Professor of Politics and European Studies at New York University. He is the author of, among other books, “Revolution from Abroad: Soviet Conquest of Poland’s Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia” and is coeditor of “The Politics of Retribution in Europe: World War II and Its Aftermath.” When I Lived in Modem Times by Linda Grant, Dutton (Penguin Putnam Inc.), 375 Hudson St., New York, NY 10014. 260 pp. $23.95. This is the story of Evelyn Sert, who at the age of 20, left her home in London on false papers for Palestine. She first joined a kibbutz and moved to Tel Aviv. There, unfortunately, she finds love with a man who is not what he seems to be. She is swept up as an unwilling spy in an underground army for a nation fighting to be bom. This novel is the story of one woman’s discovery of herself, her heritage and the nation that would one day become Israel. It won the prestigious Orange Prize in June 2000, which was established in 1996 to honor novels of excellence, originality and accessibility by women writers. About the Author Linda Grant is one of England’s leading journalists and writers. This book is her first work of fic tion published in the U.S. She is the author of three previous books, including “The Cast Iron Shore” (winner of the David Higham Prize for best first novel of 1995) and “Remind Me Who I Am, Again,” her acclaimed account of her moth er’s dementia. Motherland by Fern Schumer Chapman, Penguin Putnam Inc., 375 Hudson St., New York, NY 10014. 208 pp. $13 (paperback). This book is subtitled “Beyond the Holocaust: A Mother-Daughter Journey to Reclaim the Past.” For years, Fem Schumer Chapman was rankled by an incomplete sense of identity: her mother, Edith WesleiTield Schumer, refused to (Continued on page 11) PICK A ROSENFELD for All Your Real Estate Needs Over 25 Years Experience ':sBB Home 704-321-0220 BARBARA Coldzuell Banker Flouhouse 704-541-6100 MARSHALL Queenstowne Realty 704-543-6046 Could Be Victorias WATERFALL. Imagine the tingle of restorative jets from multiple nozzles in a shower that pleases the eye as well as the body. Your day deserves no less than Moen’s Asceri^“ Vertical Spa Experience or its personable cousins. With the finest brands of Europe and North America, Watermark encourages thoughtful browsing: faucets, showers, tubs and toilets that work right in the showroom; a scandalous hoard of cabinet pulls; and a dazzling medley of bath and kitchen accessories. 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