9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Goldsmith goes platinum with "The Bestseller"., February 13, 2000
By A Customer
Though I must admit Ms. Goldsmith's stories have their faults (pat endings, too much anti-male rhetoric, and extremely dorky last names like Clapfish) her stories are damn entertaining. This one was definitely no exception. I read the thing in one sitting--something I've haven't done in ages. The characters are cocky, funny, and very interesting. We're given a very informative look inside the publishing business. Even though it was easy to guess who Peet Trawley (V.C. Andrews) and Susanne Baker Edmonds (Danielle Steel) are inspired by, it's still kind of cool to see Ms. Goldsmith's take on both of them. Terry's overwhelming sense of rejection and Opal's grieving are very sincere and realistic. The friendship between Opal and Roberta is genuine and touching. Even the bitchy Pam Mantiss (whose name is way too obvious)is fascinating and even sympathetic (in a weird villian sort of way)at times. I even loved that odd little fellow named GOD. Despite it's flaws, I definitely recommend the novel. It's one that you won't get out of your head for a long time.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Candy box of surprises about the publishing industry, August 31, 2000
The premise of "The Bestseller" is simple enough for a Hollywood producer to understand" "First Wives Club" author Olivia Goldsmith offers us five writers with their five books. By the end, one of their novels will hit the top of the New York Times Best Seller list. Which will it be?
* Will it be Gerald Ochs Davis, the president of Davis & Dash? He s hoping that resurrecting an uncle's tragedy decades ago will make enough money to keep his mistress and ex-wives satisfied, and himself at the head of the now corporately owned company. To that end, he'll do anything" order an expensive ad budget, set an impossibly high quota for the sales force and even steal sales from other authors.
* Then there's Susann Baker Edmonds, formerly Sue Ann Edmonds, a legal secretary from the Midwest, who at 58 is facing the end of her career. She is also beset by her daughter, who bitterly resents her mother.
* The college professor author of "In Full Knowledge," a thriller about a woman driven to kill her children, is being heavily promoted as a man who understands women. Little do they know that his wife actually wrote the book, a fact which her husband is not eager to make known.
* Poor Terry O'Neal. She kills herself after writing a 1,000-page novel called "The Duplicity of Men," after seeing it rejected by 23 publishers. Now the manuscript falls into the hands of her mother, Opal, who is determined to do anything to see it published.
* Camilla Clapfish is the dowdy, terribly lonely British girl, working as a tour guide in Italy, while finishing her first novel about a group of middle-aged women wandering around Firenze. As a neophyte writer, she has no idea what to do next, until her budding boyfriend suggests sending it to his sister, an editorial assistant at Davis & Dash.
From this premise, Goldsmith weaves an elaborate dance of backstabbing, determination, desire and romance that is guaranteed to have you turning the pages late into the night.
Those who have a smattering of knowledge of the publishing business will realize just how spot-on Goldsmith is. She knows the bottom-line nature of the business and the lengths people will go to stay on top. There is even the pleasure of guessing who the characters are based on.
For example, one of the subplots involves the uproar over Davis & Dash publishing "ScitzoBoy," by Chad Weston, a once-promising writer driven by falling sales into writing a misogynistic thriller about a Wall Street yuppie who dismembers women, and if you're thinking it's a wicked attack on Bret Easton Ellis and "American Psycho," you are correct.
"The Bestseller" is full of digs like this. With that, the heroic struggles of the authors to get their books published, and the machinations of G.O.D. and the marketplace working against them, "The Bestseller" is a candy box of surprises that, even after 500 pages, makes this reader hungry for a sequel.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A book to be read greedily, May 2, 1998
By A Customer
Although The Bestseller isn't flawless, it earns a 10 because it so enjoyable to read. As a former member of the lowest echelon of publishing house employees (the temp. worker), I can vouch that there is incredible tension to produce a hit. One might as well work in Hollywood. On the other hand, if there is actually any of the illegal or immoral activity that goes on in her book, I certainly didn't know about it! Goldsmith accurately pigeonholed the view publishers take with manuscripts -- they can't just be great books, they must have a selling angle, such as a "Pink" (romance or other `women's fiction), a "Dick" [a Tom Clancy-ish adventure or war novel], a "spook"[horror] or an "Uh-oh"[a murder mystery or suspenseful legal thriller]. One wonders if The Bestseller's hot pink cover was some sort of subtle implication. From what little industry "insider knowledge" I had, I could tell that Goldsmith was using actual facts which I found troublesome on two levels. First, I don't feel it's fair of her to embarrass a famous author's wife under the guise of fiction. Secondly, I would imagine that readers who didn't know "the inside scoop" would feel a bit alienated. However, I would say that her use of real-life publishing power brokers such as Daisy Maryles or Phyllis Grann was effective in making her fiction seem very realistic. My one other issue with her story [STOP READING here if you don't want any clues] involves one surefire book that inexplicably doesn't pan out at all. She even has her characters marvel at the book's demise, but it's a bit too convenient. Despite this, The Bestseller is chock-full of solid writing and five great stories, all of which end in a perfectly satisfying manner.
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