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17 Reviews
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting life of a book rep,
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
This is an interesting account of a woman's life as a book rep. It gives the reader a look into a world that most of us know little to nothing about. Those people who love books and bookstores will enjoy reading this. As a booklover myself, I have often thought(dreamily) about how wonderful a 'book rep' job might be. This gives you (me) a little reality check on that.
I wanted to read this because of the sub-title: "Living it up in the world of books." I love to read books about books, and books about people who love books. This was more of a memoir about a life and career that happened to involve the selling of books. I enjoyed the story and read it up over two days. There are a lot of interesting things that happened in this woman's life as a book rep., and she shares the happy and sad times. I thought that the ending was fitting, in a 'full circle' sort of way. She had some brushes with some very well known people -which was fun to read about, and she has become well known and respected in her field of work. There's a section in the middle with pictures. I thought that was nice to get a look at not only the author but some of the people that she talks about in the book. Each chapter begins with a short quote. I loved the one for the first chapter: "Some people never go crazy. What truly horrible lives they must live" by Charles Bukowski The book reads well, and I like the author's style. I very much enjoyed this book and highly recommend it!
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Pleasant Surprise,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
As a book sales professional of a younger generation, I bought this book for the glimpses it promised into "the good old days" of bookselling. I was pleasantly surprised to find a rich and layered narrative written in a strong voice that instantly drew me in. While books and bookselling remain central to Werris' story, her honest retelling of the ups and downs of her life reminded me that life is more than just a climb up the corporate ladder. Kudos to the author for her warm and generous memoir.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Unbiased Review - Maybe Not,
By psr "psr" (Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
This is a book about books, the business of books, the way books come to be, the way they look and feel in your hands, the way they get from the author to the publisher to the shelf to the reader,the way they affect people and people's lives. It is written by a genuine book person and is also part of the story of her life and growth, how her "becoming" has been influenced by her lifelong love and respect for books and her profession as a publisher's sales rep.
Not everyone has the ability to make you laugh through words on a page, but Wendy Werris does. Her tone is conversational and she takes you right in, unabashedly describing her nutty home life, her accidental, you might even say fatal, entry into the book world, the people she has encountered along the way, some of them quite famous, others just plain eccentric. It is a book about books and so, too, a book about people. Well wrought, accessible and well worth a read.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Great Storyteller -- A Must-Read for Book and Bookstore Lovers,
By
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
"An Alphabetical Life" is warm, funny, touching and a terrific read. Anyone who loves books and bookstores will love Werris' story. Too many memoirs these days lack true insight and don't seem to be about anything. Werris is a great storyteller, and you'll feel like you've made a friend when you finish. So in the spirit of her book, stop at your local indie bookshop and pick up a copy!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Book Lovers Must Read,
By Julie Jordan Scott "Writer, Life Coach - Owne... (Bakersfield, CA United States) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
I was attracted to this title after spending many years as a book lover to the nth degree as well as being a writer and a former publisher's rep. It seemed like a Reader/Writer match made in heaven, especially given the geography Werris and I share.
Werris was a trailblazer, a professional female publisher's rep before this was common. She learned her stuff in the trenches while participating in all the expected revelrie of the 60's and beyond. The characters that accompanied her life journey were as colorful as the books they peddled, expertly and lovingly. The book brought laughter and tears, bittersweet moments as we saw the book industry change as we turned page after page after page. My only criticism was the boxy chronology. It was almost written as separate books - here is Wendy Book Rep, here is Wendy in the rest of her life. The parts that engaged me the most were her parents' deaths, her survival after a rape, little bits and pieces about her spirituality and then looping back around to the reunion of most of the original Pickwick staffers. I would have preferred to have more personal life stuff interwoven throughout, but that is simply my taste. Great quotes include: "We never know what may happen when we pick up a book to read. The turning of a page might actually change the course of our existence. There is something very 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 them selves." "Life has revealed itself in a language known only to me, comprised of my own private alphabet. You, too, have such a language. The discovery of it is found in the sum total of every experience we have known - all the loves, losses, agonizing pain and ecstatic joys." And then there is the quote in the very front of the book, not from Wendy Werris but from Charles Bukowski: "Some people never go crazy. What truly horrible lives they must live." I shared this with Emma and we both laughed and nodded. How wondrous that a nine-year-old gets this!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A rich and engaging memoir,
By Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
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 [...]
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Attention All Bibliophiles!,
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
"An Alphabetical Life: Living it up in the World of Books", by author Wendy Werris is a must read for all book lovers, book sellers, book buyers, etc. Wendy Werris wrote an entertaining read about her life; starting at Pickwick bookstore in Hollywood, to becoming a publishers sales representative. Wendy Werris writes about her friendship with Miriam Bass with poignancy; George Carroll & Jack O'Leary, Hugh Callens, her parents, and many others with such warmth and affection. The characters in the book are a little eccentric, but it adds to this engaging and wonderful memoir.
I encourage anyone who loves to read and has a passion for books to get a copy of "An Alphbetical Life" - it is a keeper.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Memoir of life in the book trade,
By
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
I'm a big sucker for books about bookstores. Or books about books in general. Needless to say, when I stumbled across Werris's memoir on sale, I snatched it up immediately. Werris begins her narrative by introducing her readers to the world of Pickwick Books, where her long career in the book business so humbly began at the tender age of 19.
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.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not "84 Charing Cross Road",
By Sergio (Texas) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
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.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A bibliophile's delight and a first class memoir,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books (Paperback)
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. - Tim Bazzett, author of the ReedCityBoy trilogy.
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An Alphabetical Life: Living It Up in the World of Books by Wendy Werris (Paperback - October 18, 2006)
$15.95
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