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Loading... An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Booksby Wendy Werris
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A good start and a great finish, but lagged a bit in the middle. You have to be very interested in hearing about people in the book business that you've never heard of to enjoy all of this book, but it is overall a good read. It seems to be an honest memoir, and perhaps that naturally leads to some low points. You'll hear comparisons to "84 Charing Cross Road", but Hanff was a book reader/lover and that makes a big difference. Werris is a book lover, but this memoir is really about loving bookselling/promoting, and it just doesn't have the natural warmth that Charing Cross Road has. Os. I'd never heard of Wendy Werris, but this woman writes like someone who's been doing it all her life. It must be all those books she's read, a kind of osmosis. Her life-long love affair with books is so obvious that I immediately recognized a kindred spirit. But this is not JUST about books; it is a finely nuanced and moving memoir of the first order. Werris's descriptions of her unorthodox Jewish home life, her father's show business connections and success - followed by a long slide into oblivion - are all so perfectly rendered you can feel the joys and sorrows. And she doesn't shrink from the more painful times either - her personal battles with drugs and alcohol, her brutal rape by a stranger, the long slow declines and deaths of her parents, and the sad dehumanizing changes in the book business which she bears witness to over more than thirty years. In her on-line blog, Ms. Werris notes she's currently working on a bio of her dad, Snag Werris, once a chief writer for Jackie Gleason. Write on, Wendy. I'll read it. This is a memoir about a woman's life journey through the book world. Wendy Werris starts by working for her local, indie bookstore and moves into the male-dominated world of publishers' representatives. Certain aspects of this story were interesting, including the inner workings of book stores and the relationships between book buyers and publisher's reps. However, other incidents described in the book seemed to be included only as a way for Ms. Werris to drop in names of famous people she's met along the way. This was not a bad book, but for a similar reading experience, Buzbee's Yellow-Lighted Bookshop is much better, in my opinion. This review also appears on my blog Literary License (short reviews, real opinions): litlicense.blogspot.com no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)
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Werris's father, Snag Werris, was a writer for the Jackie Gleason Show and between his famous friends and Werris's job in Hollywood, quite a bit of name-dropping goes on in the book which initally irked me. However, it was interesting to read about the book buying habits of Alfred Hitchcock, Mick Jagger and Joni Mitchell. In time, Werris becomes a publisher's rep in a time where few women held such a position. In 1976, she was one of two women book reppers in the country. She was something of a trailblazer in the field and often faced frustration as independent bookstores closed in the face of chain megastores.
Recommended for anyone who loves books about books, as well as lovers of autobiographies and women's studies. (