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Beinhaltet den Namen: WendyWerris

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life in books from retail at Pickwick to rep for many publishers
 
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ritaer | 9 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 7, 2021 |
I can't even rate this book. I really thought it sounded interesting to read about someone who had worked in book stores, bought and sold books but all Wendy Werris does is write diatrible dribble. She drops names as if we should be impressed, she talks about her immaturity towards finances which showed me how important it is to save for a rainy day and most of all her drinking and drug habit really didn't make me think she had learned anything from it. So 59 pages from the end I stopped reading because even though I am a diehard book fanatic- I just couldn't take it ANYMORE!
So I've read what I did and considered it read!!
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SandraBrower | 9 weitere Rezensionen | Oct 27, 2019 |
A rich and engaging memoir: What sort of book could be more appealing to readers of a book review website than one that chronicles a life spent in and around the book business? Wendy Werris's captivating memoir of more than 30 years in varied aspects of that business is sure to please book lovers everywhere.

Werris began her career at the age of 20 in 1970 as a bookseller at the Pickwick Bookshop on Hollywood Boulevard. The last chapter recounts the 2004 reunion of her former co-workers that attests eloquently to the power of books to unite people. From there, she moved through a series of bookstore jobs before landing a marketing position with Straight Arrow Books, the bookselling division of Rolling Stone magazine. That job ended disastrously, but it eventually led to her first job as a publisher's representative, a position she would hold in various forms for almost 30 years, representing 70 publishers both well-known and obscure.

Werris doesn't shrink from describing the dramatic changes she has witnessed in the bookselling business, most prominently the demise of independent bookstores and the rise of the chains. The numbers are stark: two-thirds of the bookstores she served in Southern California and Arizona between 1985 and 2005 no longer exist. Still, she's rueful but not sentimental in assessing that changing landscape. "The business will never again be what it once was," she writes. "It's not possible to find the cultivated sensibility of the past in most publishers and bookstores today, because economic realities no longer allow for it."

The subtitle of this memoir is a bit misleading: Readers who think "living it up" refers to wild parties with famous authors are in for a surprise. Werris doesn't gloss over the pain of lonely nights in cookie cutter hotel rooms or the drudgery of waking up the next morning with the job of persuading skeptical bookstore buyers to purchase the debut novel of an unknown author or the latest self-help book. The need for a successful traveling salesperson to "wear aloneness as a cloak of honor" will resonate with anyone who has traveled the road selling.

Unlike many memoirists, Werris is no casual namedropper, but the account of a dinner spent with Eric Idle (of Monty Python fame), George Harrison and Tom Petty is guaranteed to bring a smile to the reader's face. Her encounters with famous authors like Richard Brautigan, Kurt Vonnegut and Jonathan Franzen are offered in a refreshingly straightforward style.

Interwoven with Werris's stories of the ups and downs of her working life are frank but loving reminiscences of her parents. Her father, Snag, was a former vaudevillian who fashioned a highly successful career as a comedy writer for such well-known names as Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra and, most prominently, Jackie Gleason. Werris's mother, Charlotte, was a free spirit whose favorite dishes included jellied pigs' feet and calves' brains. She writes poignantly of her parents' economic and emotional decline after her father's comedy writing career passed its peak.

Perhaps the most compelling chapter of the book takes the reader, at least superficially, on a tangent that veers from Werris's relatively straightforward account of her bookselling career. In 1981, she was raped in her Los Angeles apartment. In riveting detail, she describes her struggle to come to terms with the enormity of the crime. Her search ultimately leads her to a book about cold cases written by crime novelist Michael Connelly. Through him she meets several compassionate police officers who guide her to acceptance of the fact that her assailant will never be held accountable for his crime. "We never know what may happen when we pick up a book to read," she observes. "The turning of a page might actually change the course of our existence. There is something miraculous about this. Truth strikes at the very heart of books and the readers who turn themselves over with great trust to finding the essence of themselves."

Wendy Werris's life has had more than its share of sadness, but in AN ALPHABETICAL LIFE she makes it clear that it's been a rich and well-lived one. In this memoir she reveals herself as an engaging companion anyone would enjoy spending an evening with over a hearty meal and a bottle of fine wine. For those of us who won't be able to do that anytime soon, this book is a satisfying substitute.

--- Reviewed by Harvey Freedenberg [...]
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lonepalm | 9 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 8, 2011 |
I enjoyed the book as a memoir -- she's about the same age as I am -- but I was disappointed in how few insights she offered about books, the people who read them, the people who sell them. Very personally focused. Not a waste of time, but not worth purchasing specially.
 
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NellieMc | 9 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 18, 2010 |

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Werke
3
Mitglieder
288
Beliebtheit
#81,142
Bewertung
½ 3.5
Rezensionen
10
ISBNs
2

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