It’s the first Saturday of the month, which means it’s time to participate in Six Degrees of Separation (check out Kate’s blog to find out the “rules” and how to participate).
This month the starting book is a non-fiction modern classic…
‘Eats, Shoots & Leaves’ by Lynne Truss (2003)
I read this when it was first published because I was a magazine production editor in London at the time, which meant I was the person responsible for sending pages to press and was basically the last person responsible for catching any grammatical (and legal and layout) errors that had slipped through our editing processes. This book, which is all about English language usage (it is sub-titled “The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation”), was a hoot and showed me I wasn’t alone in being pedantic about comma usage, spellings and sentence structure (active, not passive, please!)
This brings to mind…
‘Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen’ by Mary Norris (2015)
This is the American equivalent of Eats, Shoots and Leaves, written by the long-time copy editor at The New Yorker. It’s an entertaining read, and quite funny in places, but unfortunately, its mix of memoir and guide to grammar usage didn’t really work for me. It’s certainly not particularly helpful as a guide to the English language unless you edit American English. But I did like its insights into magazine life, which brings to mind…
‘Bright Lights, Big City’ by Jay McInerney (1985)
In this Manhattan novel, the main character is employed as a fact-checker on a prestigious magazine (thought to be The New Yorker). His life is falling apart (his glamourous wife, for instance, has left him) and he’s feeling aggrieved that he’s been passed over for promotion. He has a tenacious, demanding boss who micro-manages him, forcing him to take risky shortcuts to meet strict deadlines. You know it’s not going to end well! The novel’s mix of black humour and pathos makes it a truly memorable read, probably one of my all-time favourites, if I am honest. Some aspects of it bring to mind…
‘The Devil Wears Prada’ by Lauren Weisberger (2003)
This fast-paced tale about a magazine assistant working for a tyrannical boss is a real romp! Andrea, a recent college graduate, dreams of writing for the New Yorker. But she knows that hitting such heights requires some legwork and experience, so when she lands the job “that millions would die for” on a glossy fashion magazine in Manhattan she’s prepared to put in the hard graft. She just didn’t expect to work for a mean-spirited control freak.
This brings to mind…
‘Slab Rat’ by Ted Heller (2001)
This is another black comedy about magazine journalism, which is also set in New York. I read it so long ago I can’t point to a review because it was before I started this blog. The story focuses on a staffer, from the wrong side of the tracks to be working on a glitzy magazine, who does questionable things to ensure his rival doesn’t get the promotion he feels rightfully belongs to him. It’s about the underhand things you need to do to get ahead in journalism and the price some people are prepared to pay to win. Behaving in a devious manner brings to mind…
‘About the Author’ by John Colapinto (2002)
This is another story about a writer who behaves immorally to get ahead, except the main character here is a would-be novelist who steals a manuscript (written by a friend who has died an untimely death) and tries to pass it off as his own. It’s a darkly comic story that lingers in my memory almost 20 years after having read it! The book publishing aspects of it bring to mind…
‘A Far Cry from Kensington’ by Muriel Spark (1988)
In this tale about book publishing in the 1950s, we meet a purple-prosed writer behaving badly and his candid editor who plays him at his own game. It’s a riotously funny novel with a brilliant London setting, and it shows that even people with letters can act abhorrently!
So that’s this month’s #6Degrees: from a story about grammar usage to the fictional tale of an editor rowing with an author, via four stories about people who make their living using words, whether as fact-checkers, editorial assistants, journalists or novelists.
Have you read any of these books?
Please note, you can see all my other Six Degrees of Separation contributions here.
I must re-read the Spark and the Colapinto sounds fun – I love books set in this world – a super chain.
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Thanks. Yes, I vaguely remember I might have included the Colapinto in a previous chain and you’d mentioned you’d read it before. It’s a super fun book.
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I’m intrigued by Slab Rat now – sounds right up my street!
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Haha. I’m tempted to read it again myself if only to see whether it’s as good as I remembered it to be. I read it when my own magazine career was just started out and it resonated at the time.
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Nice twist here with your chain… I just bought this starting book and will be reading it soon, even though I’ve wanted to read it for years and years!
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Be interesting to see whether it still holds up after all these years. I have fond memories of it.
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I’ll let you know.
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Usually I avoid books featuring journalism/journalists because so often the author gets this world completely wrong. But I’m reassured that youve read them and didn’t cringe so I’m tempted to try Bright Lights.
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Oh, they’re my favourite kind of novels… I love them! Here’s a list I put together in 2015 – https://readingmattersblog.com/2015/01/08/ten-books-about-journalists/
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Just looked at your list – quite a few I’ve not read but if you are highlighting them then I can be sure they’ll be true portrayals of the craft of journalism and the characters. I’ve read Shipping News but completely forgot most of it
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