FVJS Sunday School Teacher Opening!

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Join the staff at a unique non-traditional Sunday School!  One opening is available  for grades 3-4 and 5-8.  Fox Valley Jewish School, the Sunday school run by Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors, serves Jewish and interfaith families looking for something a little different.  Located in Geneva, IL, the school meets two Sunday mornings each month from 9:30-11:30, September through May.  This teacher would teach each of the two age groups for one hour each Sunday.  Topics include Jewish history with an emphasis on Jews in America, ethics, basic Torah (Bible), life cycle events and community service.   Compensation is $50 per Sunday.  Jewish applicants preferred but not required.  Send resumes to rachely@fvjn.org. Deadline May 1.

March 2015 ENews!

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Upcoming Events!

March

3/4 – Lazarus Mitzvah Dinner

3/6 – Shabbat Evening Potluck

3/8 *Daylight Savings! Set your clocks!

3/8 – FVJS

3/21 – NIFB Volunteer Morning

3/21 – Adult Social Dinner

3/22 – FVJS

3/22 – Board Meeting

 

3/4 – Lazarus House Mitzvah Dinner

Do you like to help out in the community? Do you know that it’s a mitzvah (commandment) in Judaism to help others? We have an easy way for you to do this! Click http://www.fvjn.org/lazarus-house  for more info, and to sign up!

3/6 – Shabbat Evening Potluck, 6:30 pm at FVJN

Come for Shabbat blessings and dinner with friends! FVJN provides pizza and beverages; you bring the sides and desserts. RSVPs appreciated. Minimum of 5 people, or event is cancelled. Please RSVP to: rachely@fvjn.org

3/21 – NIFB Volunteer Day, 9 – 11:30 am, Northern Illinois Food Bank, Geneva.

Sign up is required in advance. Ages 8 and up welcome. Email Alysa with names and ages, by 3/11: ahwalisz@comcast.net

3/21 – Adult Social Dinner

Vino Thai, Saturday, March 21, 6:00pm                                                             3825 E Main St, St Charles, IL 60174                                                                     (630) 443-8461                                                                                                         RSVPs required! fvjn.org/rsvp

Yankee Candle (and Plants!) Spring Fundraiser!

It’s time to think about your garden, and benefit FVJN, too!                             It’s the Yankee Candle Spring Fundraiser Sale! FVJN receives 40% of every order!! With beautiful flowering seed mats, hanging cherry tomato kits and more, as well as lovely candles and other gift items, you’ll want to be sure too order before it’s too late!                                                                                             Log onto https://www.yankeecandlefundraising.com                                     Under “Start Shopping,” enter the FVJN group #: 990072571

Share online ordering information with family and friends! All online orders are delivered straight to your home. Order dates are 3/5 – 3/23 Don’t Miss Out! Order now! If you have questions, or would like an order packet, contact Rachel: Rachely@fvjn.org

FVJN Giving Tree

Purchase leaves on our Giving Tree to mark and share lifecycle events, honor family and friends, and to include your own family’s names on this permanent addition to FVJN’s space. Your support helps us firmly root FVJN in our community! For more information and to donate, visit https://www.fvjn.org/giving-tree

FVJN Mural Project

To donate, get involved, or for more info, visit:       https://www.fvjn.org/mural-donation

February 2015 ENews!

Upcoming Events!

February

2/4 – Lazarus Mitzvah Dinner

2/6 – Shabbat Evening Potluck

2/8 – FVJS

2/10 – Book Group

2/22 – FVJS

2/22 – Special Meeting!

2/22 – Board Meeting

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Coming Up!

2/6 – Shabbat Evening Potluck, 6:30 pm at FVJN

Please bring a side or dessert to share.

RSVPs Requested! rachely@fvjn.org

FVJN does order and provide pizza for this potluck. If you want pizza, please RSVP

by 2/5/15! (This was canceled due to lack of response.)

2/10 – FVJN Book Group, 7 pm at FVJN

The Privilege of Aging: Portraits of Twelve Jewish Women,

by Patricia Gottlieb Shapiro

Free and open to all adults! No RSVP needed.

2/22 – Special Meeting!

FVJN Mural Project Meeting Sunday, Feb. 22, 9:45 a.m.,

at FVJN. All are welcome!

To commemorate FVJN’s 10th anniversary, we are creating a tile mosaic mural to hang on the outside of the FVJN building.  The mural will be designed by professional artist Danielle Dobies and assembled by members of the FVJN community.

The FVJN community will decide what the mural will look like.  The artist is meeting with everyone interested in participating on Sunday morning, February 22 from 9:45 – 11:30 at the FVJN building located at 121 S. Third St., Geneva.  She will explain how we will make the mural and lead a discussion of ideas for what it should look like.  She will take our ideas and draw several options for us.  We will pick the one we like best, or perhaps combine elements of different designs into the perfect image. Daniele will also explain the next steps we need to do, such as collecting tiles and other materials needed to make the mural.

The estimated cost of this project is $2,000-$3,000.  We have a preliminary commitment for a grant that will cover half of the cost.  We are seeking the rest of the funds from other grants, local businesses and individuals.  The size of the mural will be adjusted to match the funds raised so FVJN will not be obligated to spend more money than we have available.  Funds will not come for FVJN’s general operating budget.  If you would like to donate, watch for details at fvjn.org and in future emails.

Come to the mural design meeting at FVJN on February 22 at 9:45 am.  This mural will be something the Fox Valley Jewish community can be proud of for a long time to come.  Your input is important.  We’ll supply the bagels and coffee.  It will be a fun morning.  If your kids are in class at FVJS during that time, it will be easy to join the discussion.  The older children will be participating as well.  This a project that we all can be a part of! To find out more or let us know you are coming (we want to make sure there are enough bagels!) email Rachel@fvjn.org.  RSVPs appreciated but not required.

Check out Danielle at work:

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It’s Not Too Late to sent in your annual donation!

If you haven’t yet donated for our End-of-the-Year Fundraising Campaign, please consider doing so Now! We have yet to reach our goal, and rely on your support to continue doing all we do!

FVJN is a 501c3 organization, and donations to us are tax deductible!

FVJN, PO Box 346, Geneva, IL 60134

Or click below to easily donate online:

https://www.fvjn.org/donate/

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Lazarus House Mitzvah Dinners!

Volunteers Needed the First Wednesday of Each Month!

Volunteers Needed for April, May & June!

Each month, we prepare dinner for 60 to 75 men, women and children at Lazarus House.

Volunteers are needed to help, NOW!

Click to sign up: http://www.fvjn.org/lazarus-house/

Or Please contact Rachel Yackley ASAP to volunteer:

rachely@fvjn.org

PLEASE SIGN UP NOW!

ENews January 2015!

Upcoming Events!

January

1/7 – Lazarus House Dinner

1/8 – PJC Meeting at FVJN

1/9 – FVJN Shabbat Evening Potluck

1/11 – FVJS

1/17 – Adult Social Dinner

1/20 – Women’s Gathering

1/25 – FVJS

1/25 – Board Meeting

1/31 – Movie Night

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What’s Happening!

1/9 – Shabbat Evening Potluck

6:30 pm at FVJN

Please bring a non-meat dish or dessert to share.

RSVPs appreciated for planning purposes:

rachely@fvjn.org

 

1/17 – Adult Social Dinner

6 pm at Front Street Cantina, 577 S. 3rd St. Geneva

RSVP required: http://fvjn.org/rsvp

 

1/20 – Women’s Gathering

7 pm at FVJN

Open to all women.

Feel free to bring a snack to share, and a beverage.

RSVPs requested. Alysa: ahwalisz@comcast.net

 

1/31 – Movie Night

7 pm Mike & Nancy’s House

Feel free to bring a snack to share, and a beverage.

RSVPs requested. Nancy: nccox@comcast.net

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FVJN Book Group 2015!

The votes are in!

Below are the book choices for this year. Book Group meets on the second Tuesday of the month.
February: The Privilege of Aging: Portraits of Twelve Jewish Women,  by Patricia Gottlieb Shapiro
April: French Impression,  by Katherine Lato
June: Saving Israel,  by Daniel Gordis
August: The  Unamericans: Stories, By Molly Antopol
October: The Rabbi’s Cat,  by Joann Sfar                                                               December: The Family: Three Journeys into the Heart of the Twentieth Century,  by David Laskin

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What’s Happening at FVJS!

Three very special blankets are now available for patients to use at Edward Hines, Jr., Veterans Administration Hospital.

Students at Fox Valley Jewish School (FVJS) in Geneva contributed to the creation of these blankets as each child decorated an 8-inch muslin square. They used fabric markers to render their colorful images of support and care.

FVJS art teacher Ruth Silverman was able to sew the muslin squares into three blankets, combining the squares with other fabric.

Silverman brought the finished blankets to the Fox Valley Jewish Neighbors Chanukah Party in December, where the children and families got to see the results of their efforts before they were donated.

All the Pre-K through 8th grade students who worked on these blankets hope they help to comfort and keep patients warm at the VA Hospital.

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Lazarus House Mitzvah Dinners!

Volunteers Needed the First Wednesday of Each Month!

Volunteers Needed for March, April & May!

Each month, we prepare dinner for 60 to 75 men, women and children at Lazarus House.

Volunteers are needed to help, NOW!

Please visit http://www.fvjn.org/lazarus-house TO SIGN UP!

Or please contact Rachel: rachely@fvjn.org

PLEASE SIGN UP NOW!

 

FVJN Book Group 2015 Picks

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Hello everyone, we have 21 books to choose from this year, thanks to everyone who sent me suggestions during the last 11 months.
Please vote for your first second and third choice during the next 7 days.
I will let everyone know the results next Sunday.
Email your tip 3 picks to: mikey@fvjn.org.

All book reviews are from Goodreads website.

1) The Unamericans: Stories
by Molly Antopol 288 pages

Moving from modern-day Jerusalem to McCarthy-era Los Angeles to communist Prague and back again. The UnAmericans is a stunning exploration of characters shaped by the forces of history. Molly Antopol’s critically acclaimed debut will long be remembered for its “poise and gravity” (New York Times), each story “so full of heart-ache and humor, love and life…[it’s] as though we’re absorbing a novel’s worth of insight” (Jesmyn Ward, Salon).

2) Saving Israel
by Daniel Gordis 272 pages

Is Israel worth saving, and if so, how do we secure its future? The Jewish State must end, say its enemies, from intellectuals like Tony Judt to hate-filled demagogues like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Even average Israelis are wondering if they wouldn’t be better off somewhere else and whether they ought to persevere. Daniel Gordis is confident his fellow Jews can renew their faith in the cause, and in “Saving Israel,” he addresses the most pressing issues faced by Israel-and American Jews-today, without recycling the same old arguments.

3) The Natural Selection
by Ona Russell 308 pages

In July of 1925, Sarah Kaufman is finally taking the holiday she deserves. What she did not know, however, was that she also would need the investigative skills she had just barely acquired, the lover she had continuously resisted, and the emotional strength that she thought had been tested enough for one lifetime. Sarah reluctantly agrees to help investigate the mysterious death of one of an enigmatic professor. With the dead professor’s own cryptic, Darwinian message as a guide, Sarah travels the short distance to Dayton, Tennessee, where the internationally followed Scopes “Monkey” trial is underway. What follows is a harrowing and complex path of dead-ends, bigotry and brutality, a journey that shatters her own preconceptions, takes her to the depths of her own desire, and ultimately leads her back to the college where Darwin’s controversial theory of evolution startlingly resurfaces in a manner she never could have predicted. Set against the backdrop of what was deemed the “Trial of the Century,” this socially and politically relevant blend of fact and fiction includes actual courtroom excerpts and vividly portrays the Scopes trial’s central figures: John Scopes, William Jennings Bryan, Clarence Darrow, and especially H. L. Mencken.

4) Getting Old Is Murder
by Rita Lakin 336 pages

She’s not Miss Marple. Her friends are no Charlie’s Angels. Nevertheless, 75-year-old Gladdy Gold and her gang of eccentric Fort Lauderdale retirees are out, about, and hunting down a killer–one who is silently stalking them.
Selma Beller was the first to go–but Gladdy and her neighbors never suspected murder until another of their friends died in an eerily similar way. Now a handsome young detective won’t listen to them, Hy Binder won’t stop telling them dirty jokes, and crazy old Greta Kronk is doing everything humanly possible to make herself into a suspect. But amid the endless rounds of poolside kibitzing, early-bird specials, bittersweet memories, and interminable grocery-shopping trips, Gladdy and her gals are about to discover how the murders are being committed. And when it comes to catching this culprit–time really is running out.

5) The Hollow Girl
by Reed Farrel Coleman 303 pages

Drunk, alone, and racked with guilt over the tragic death of his girlfriend Pam, Moe Prager is destined for oblivion. But destiny takes a detour when a shadowy figure from Moe’s past reappears to beg for Moe’s help in locating her missing daughter, an early internet sensation known ironically as the Lost Girl or the Hollow Girl. The case itself is hollow, as Moe finds little proof that anyone is actually missing. The question isn’t whether or not Moe can find the Hollow Girl, but whether the Hollow Girl was ever there at all.

6) French Impression
by Katherine Lato ( FVJN member) 417 pages

Working in Paris for a year could help Miriam move on with life. She’s off to an exciting start when she has a romantic night with a charming Frenchman, until she discovers he’s married to her new boss, Estelle.

Estelle finds the recent merger with an American firm upsetting. Her non-French employees report to their former colleagues, and work is less fulfilling. Enduring her husband’s tales about his perfect dead wife was bad enough, now she has an employee, Miriam, who mourns a similar loss.
So much divides these two women. Will they discover what they have in common?

7) The Family: Three Journeys into the Heart of the Twentieth Century
by David Laskin 400 pages

In the latter half of the nineteenth century Laskin’s great-great-grandfather, a Torah scribe named Shimon Dov HaKohen, raised six children with his wife, Beyle, in a yeshiva town at the western fringe of the Russian empire. The pious couple expected their sons and daughters to carry the family tradition into future generations. But the social and political upheavals of the twentieth century decreed otherwise.

The HaKohen family split off into three branches. One branch emigrated to America and founded the fabulously successful Maidenform Bra Company; one branch went to Palestine as pioneers and participated in the contentious birth of the state of Israel; and the third branch remained in Europe and suffered the Holocaust.

In tracing the roots of his own family, Laskin captures the epic sweep of twentieth-century history. A modern-day scribe, Laskin honors the traditions, the lives, and the choices of his ancestors: revolutionaries and entrepreneurs, scholars and farmers, tycoons and truck drivers. The Family is an eloquent masterwork of true grandeur—a deeply personal, dramatic, and universal account of a people caught in a cataclysmic time in world history.

8) Annie Freeman’s Fabulous Traveling Funeral
by Kris Radish 331 pages

For Katherine Givens and the four women about to become her best friends, the adventure begins with a UPS package. Inside is a pair of red sneakers filled with ashes and a note that will forever change their lives. Katherine’s oldest and dearest friend, the irrepressible Annie Freeman, left one final request–a traveling funeral–and she wants the most important women in her life as “pallbearers.”

From Sonoma to Manhattan, Katherine, Laura, Rebecca, Jill, and Marie will carry Annie’s ashes to the special places in her life. At every stop there’s a surprise encounter and a small miracle waiting, and as they whoop it up across the country, attracting interest wherever they go, they share their deepest secrets–tales of broken hearts and second chances, missed opportunities and new beginnings. And as they grieve over what they’ve lost, they discover how much is still possible if only they can unravel the secret Annie left them.

9) The Privilege of Aging: Portraits of Twelve Jewish Women
by Patricia Gottlieb Shapiro 127 pages

In The Privilege of Aging author Patricia Shapiro (M.S.W.) opens a window for us into the lives of women from 75 to 102 years old and explores their successes and challenges, longevity and vitality. Each woman has lived a different path of life, and their examples show us that the resources for successful aging are within us.

10) Like Dreamers: The Paratroopers Who Reunited Jerusalem in the Six-Day War, and the Divided Israel They Created
by Yossi Klein Halevi 320 pages

In June 1967, Israel won a swift and decisive victory in the Six Day War.
Through extensive reporting, Yossi Klein Halevi explores the lives of seven members of Brigade 55 — a popular songwriter, a soldier-turned-radical, a brilliant economist, and religious revolutionaries-and traces their evolving beliefs. Emerging from a religious Zionist background, one group became founders and leaders of the West Bank settlement movement. The other-peace activists who grew out of the world of secular agrarian communes known as kibbutzim-rose in opposition to the settlements. Both groups agreed that Jewish statehood was a powerful, transformative event: For the founders of the kibbutz-based peace movement, Israel would become the laboratory for democratic communism. For many religious Zionists, Israel would become the catalyst for the messianic era.

11) A Bride for One Night: Talmud Tales
by Ruth Calderon 184 pages

Ruth Calderon has recently electrified the Jewish world with her teachings of talmudic texts. In this volume, her first to appear in English, she offers a fascinating window into some of the liveliest and most colorful stories in the Talmud. Calderon rewrites talmudic tales as richly imagined fictions, drawing us into the lives of such characters as the woman who risks her life for a sister suspected of adultery; a humble schoolteacher who rescues his village from drought; and a wife who dresses as a prostitute to seduce her pious husband in their garden. Breathing new life into an ancient text,A Bride for One Night offers a surprising and provocative read, both for anyone already intimate with the Talmud or for anyone interested in one of the most influential works of Jewish literature.

12) Hope: A Tragedy
by Shalom Auslander 292 pages

To begin again. To start anew. But it isn’t quite working out that way for Kugel. His ailing mother stubbornly holds on to life, and won’t stop reminiscing about the Nazi concentration camps she never actually suffered through. To complicate matters further, some lunatic is burning down farmhouses just like the one Kugel bought, and when, one night, he discovers history—a living, breathing, thought-to-be-dead specimen of history—hiding upstairs in his attic, bad quickly becomes worse.

13) The Opposite of Everything
by David Kalish 300 pages

When Brooklyn journalist Daniel Plotnick learns he has cancer, his fortunes fall faster than you can say Ten Plagues of Egypt. His wife can’t cope, his marriage ends in a showdown with police, and his father accidentally pushes him off the George Washington Bridge. In the darkly comedic tradition of Philip Roth and Lorrie Moore comes a new novel from author David Kalish, who draws us into a hilarious, off-kilter world where cancer tears apart relationships…and builds new ones.

14) The Sabbath: Its Meaning for Modern Man
by Abraham Joshua Heschel 118 pages

Elegant, passionate, and filled with the love of God’s creation, Abraham Joshua Heschel’s The Sabbath has been hailed as a classic of Jewish spirituality ever since its original publication-and has been read by thousands of people seeking meaning in modern life. In this brief yet profound meditation on the meaning of the Seventh Day, Heschel introduced the idea of an “architecture of holiness” that appears not in space but in time Judaism, he argues, is a religion of time: it finds meaning not in space and the material things that fill it but in time and the eternity that imbues it, so that “the Sabbaths are our great cathedrals.”

15) Shiksa: The Gentile Woman in the Jewish World
by Christine Benvenuto 304 pages

Shiksa tells the stories of gentile women and women converts living in the Jewish community today, sharing insights from rabbis, Jewish feminists, educators and therapists. The book explores relationships between Jewish and gentile women, particularly Jewish mothers and their gentile daughters-in-law, as well as those between Jewish men and gentile women. And it looks at some of the fascinating Biblical figures whose stories startle with their relevance to today’s most intimate issues of Jewish identity.

16) The Rabbi’s Cat
A graphic novel by Joann Sfar 152 pages

In Algeria in the 1930s, a cat belonging to a widowed rabbi and his beautiful daughter, Zlabya, eats the family parrot and gains the ability to speak. To his master’s consternation, the cat immediately begins to tell lies (the first being that he didn’t eat the parrot). The rabbi vows to educate him in the ways of the Torah, while the cat insists on studying the kabbalah and having a Bar Mitzvah. They consult the rabbi’s rabbi, who maintains that a cat can’t be Jewish — but the cat, as always, knows better.

17) The Assistant
by Bernard Malamud 264 pages

Bernard Malamud’s second novel, originally published in 1957, is the story of Morris Bober, a grocer in postwar Brooklyn, who “wants better” for himself and his family. First two robbers appear and hold him up; then things take a turn for the better when broken-nosed Frank Alpine becomes his assistant. But there are complications: Frank, whose reaction to Jews is ambivalent, falls in love with Helen Bober; at the same time he begins to steal from the store.

18) Countrymen: The Untold Story of How Denmark’s Jews Escaped the Nazis
by Bo Lidegaard 416 pages

Amid the dark, ghastly history of World War II, the literally extraordinary story, never before fully researched by a historian, of how the Danish people banded together to save their fellow Jews from the Nazis—told through the remarkable unpublished diaries and documents of families forced to run for safety, leaving their homes and possessions behind, and of those who courageously came to their aid.

While the bare facts of this exodus have been known for decades, astonishingly no full history of it has been written. Unfolding on a day-to-day basis, Countrymen brings together accounts written by individuals and officials as events happened, offering a comprehensive overview that underlines occupied Denmark’s historical importance to Hitler as a prop for the model Nazi state and revealing the savage conflict among top Nazi brass for control of the country. This is a story of ordinary glory, of simple courage and moral fortitude that shines out in the midst of the terrible history of the twentieth century and demonstrates how it was possible for a small and fragile democracy to stand against the Third Reich.

19) Sophie Scholl and the White Rose
by Jud Newborn 257 pages

From beginning to end, the captivating story of Sophie Scholl and the White Rose is an uplifting and enlightening account of the largely untold story of German resistance to the Third Reich. With details of Scholl ‘s arrest and trial before Hitler’s Hanging Judge, Rol and Freisler, and including the leaflets that the White Rose circulated throughout the German population, this volume is an invaluable addition to World War II literature. And it is a fascinating window into human spirit. The animated narrative reads like a suspense novel. -New York Times

20) The Nazi Officer’s Wife: How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust
by Edith Hahn Beer, Susan Dworkin 305 pages

Edith Hahn was an outspoken young woman studying law in Vienna when the Gestapo forced Edith and her mother into a ghetto, issuing them papers branded with a “J.” Soon, Edith was taken away to a labor camp, and though she convinced Nazi officials to spare her mother, when she returned home, her mother had been deported. Knowing she would become a hunted woman, Edith tore the yellow star from her clothing and went underground, scavenging for food and searching each night for a safe place to sleep. In vivid, wrenching detail, Edith recalls a life of constant, almost paralyzing fear. She tells of German officials who casually questioned the lineage of her parents; of how, when giving birth to her daughter, she refused all painkillers, afraid that in an altered state of mind she might reveal her past; and of how, after her husband was captured by the Russians and sent to Siberia, Edith was bombed out of her house and had to hide in a closet with her daughter while drunken Russians soldiers raped women on the street.
Yet despite the risk it posed to her life, Edith Hahn created a remarkable collective record of survival: She saved every set of real and falsified papers, letters she received from her lost love, Pepi, and photographs she managed to take inside labor camps.
On exhibit at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., these hundreds of documents form the fabric of an epic story – complex, troubling, and ultimately triumphant.

21) The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America’s Banana King
by Rich Cohen 288 pages

When Samuel Zemurray arrived in America in 1891, he was tall, gangly, and penniless. When he died in the grandest house in New Orleans sixty-nine years later, he was among the richest, most powerful men in the world. In between, he worked as a fruit peddler, a banana hauler, a dockside hustler, and a plantation owner. He battled and conquered the United Fruit Company, becoming a symbol of the best and worst of the United States: proof that America is the land of opportunity, but also a classic example of the corporate pirate who treats foreign nations as the backdrop for his adventures. In Latin America, when people shouted “Yankee, go home!” it was men like Zemurray they had in mind.

Rich Cohen’s brilliant historical profile The Fish That Ate the Whale unveils Zemurray as a hidden kingmaker and capitalist revolutionary, driven by an indomitable will to succeed. Known as El Amigo, the Gringo, or simply Z, the Banana Man lived one of the great untold stories of the last hundred years. Starting with nothing but a cart of freckled bananas, he built a sprawling empire of banana cowboys, mercenary soldiers, Honduran peasants, CIA agents, and American statesmen. From hustling on the docks of New Orleans to overthrowing Central American governments, from feuding with Huey Long to working with the Dulles brothers, Zemurray emerges as an unforgettable figure, connected to the birth of modern American diplomacy, public relations, business, and war—a monumental life that reads like a parable of the American dream.