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Crunch Time: Selling Tales of the Great Downturn

January 16th, 2010 01:35:02 am

Crunch Time: Selling Tales of the Great Downturn
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Dominique Browning, former editor of House & Garden, has written “Slow Love,” a memoir of losing her job and what happened afterward. (She was pleasantly surprised.) It comes out in May.


Published: January 15, 2010

The new George Clooney film, “Up in the Air,” hit a nerve with its portrayal of an unmoored corporate executioner who makes his living by firing people. Now several writers and their publishers are hoping to catch the same wave with a cluster of forthcoming memoirs and novels that describe the fallout of losing a job, losing a house or losing an investment account.


Call it layoff lit. Next month will bring “The Bag Lady Papers,” a memoir by Alexandra Penney, the former editor in chief of Self magazine, who said she had lost all her savings to Bernard L. Madoff. In May Dominique Browning, the former editor of House & Garden, has a memoir, “Slow Love: How I Got Kicked Off the Fast Track, Put My Pajamas On for a Year & Found Happiness.”


On the fictional front, Janelle Brown, an author whose first novel chronicled the lives of several boom-time Silicon Valley characters, has another coming in June, “This Is Where We Live,” that opens with a 30-something artsy couple in Los Angeles on the brink of losing their home — after their adjustable-rate mortgage adjusts. T. M. Shine, who was laid off from his job as a feature writer for City Link, a weekly magazine in Florida, has a September publication date for his novel, “Nothing Happens Until It Happens to You,” which he originally intended as a memoir about being fired.


These books offer a personal flip side to the rash of titles that have taken a more reported, historical view of the financial crisis, examining the collapse of various investment banks (“House of Cards” by William D. Cohan), the role of government (“In Fed We Trust” by David Wessel) or the big picture (“The Ascent of Money” by Niall Ferguson).


But the publishers also hope that readers will view these new memoirs and novels as a timely addition to a longstanding genre: books about starting over and second acts.


“I think there’s this perennial promise that we all have trouble believing, but always turns out to be true, which is that what’s out there always holds more promise than we can imagine,” said Kristine Puopolo, a senior editor at Doubleday. That company published “Cherries in Winter,” a memoir by Suzan Colón, a laid-off editor from O magazine who interwove reflections on frugal, more mindful living with stories from her own past, as well as recipes and remembrances from her family. “We don’t want it to happen to us,” Ms. Puopolo said. “But you can kind of live it vicariously through somebody else.”


Ms. Browning, 54, who was editor at House & Garden for 12 years, applauded the string of books examining the personal effects of the financial downturn. “I think it’s terrific that there are books coming out about this,” she said. “We need to focus on the human toll this is taking,” she noted, adding, “It’s a very human conversation about depression, loss of self, loss of pride and loss of bearings, and those are individual stories.”


Some of these books have been written by authors who held very lucrative positions and had the resources to help them through their financial downfalls. Some booksellers wonder if the average reader will be able to empathize with them.


Indeed, early in Ms. Browning’s memoir, she contemplates a trip to Brooks Brothers to buy a pair of pajamas for better lounging. And in “The Bag Lady Papers,” Ms. Penney writes of having to sell two of her three homes and describes how a friend takes her to the Four Seasons Grill Room for lunch to commiserate.


“I don’t know that a lot of people are going to be relating to a Dominique Browning or an Alexandra Penney,” said Karen Corvello, adult buyer for R. J. Julia Booksellers in Madison, Conn. “A segment would, but not that broad a segment.”


Lauren LeBlanc, a senior editor at Atlas & Company, who edited Ms. Browning’s book, said that even if readers were in different financial straits, they should be able to relate to the shock of losing a career. “Obviously she’s not destitute, like a lot of people end up being,” Ms. LeBlanc said of Ms. Browning. “But at the same time a lot of the experiences she goes through are something that a lot of people will feel sympathetic to.”


Loss is loss, said Ellen Archer, publisher of Hyperion, the unit of Disney that is releasing “The Bag Lady Papers.” Even a person who has a lot of money to begin with suffers when it is gone, and goes through a lifestyle re-evaluation.


“It makes you think, ‘What if that happened to me? What really is important to me?’ ” Ms. Archer said. “I think it’s a very relatable question.”



Source Reference
http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=8aea951b78b565377db8e1819d93716d


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