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The Last Days of Publishing: A Novel

par Tom Engelhardt

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Pompeii never had it so bad. Rick Koppes knows a world is ending. The only question is, will he end with it? An editor at Byzantium Press for the last quarter century, he has watched his small, classy publishing house get gobbled up, first by an American publishing giant and then by Multimedia Entertainment, the Hollywood wing of Bruno Hindemann's German media empire. His editing colleagues are being downsized, his authors axed, and in a world where the cultural wallpaper is screaming, he himself hangs on by a fingernail?the latest work of his sole best-selling author, pop psychologist Walter Groth, is racing off bookstore shelves. And that's just where his problems begin?after all, Multimedia is about to make his ex-wife, a publishing executive at another house, his boss, his assistant wants his authors, and a woman who claims her father dropped the bomb on Nagasaki insists he publish her woeful memoir. Koppes, who came of age in the sixties, is an editor slowly running off the rails. In the six episodes of The Last Days of Publishing, he refights the Vietnam War in a Chinese restaurant, discovers that the paleontological is political in a natural history museum, mixes it up with a flamboyant literary agent who went underground decades earlier, and encounters a hippie cultural oligarch on the forty-fifth floor of Multimedia's transnational entertainment headquarters. Tom Engelhardt, himself a publishing veteran, has produced a tumultuous vision of the new world in which the word finds itself hustling for a living. By turns hilarious, sardonic, and poignant, his novel deftly captures the ways in which publishing, which has long put our world between covers but has seldom been memorialized in fiction, is being transformed.… (plus d'informations)
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This is an astonishing effort, remarkable in format and intent. Editor Rick Koppes is on his last legs at a prestigious NYC publishing company heading down the tubes. Chapter by chapter, he tells stories of his background as an SDS follower in the '60s, and the wherebouts of his old friends; extolls his brief marriage to a remarkable writer and editor, short lived but casting such a shadow on his life; meets a paleontologist author at the Museum of Natural History and receives a lesson in survival of the most physically attractive. Most passionately, he encounters an author whose father was a critical cog in the Hiroshima wheel and just cannot decide what to do with or for her, and so ends up in her apartment late at night with startling results.

Author Tom Engelhardt was a senior editor. I read about him and his blog, TomDispatch.com, in another novel whose author basically credited him for being the major force behind her writing.

Thoughtful readers will really treasure this. Not for the beach or for the timid. ( )
  froxgirl | Aug 2, 2014 |
You know how when you're reading a book you know you SHOULD read and you SHOULD like and the voice in your head just starts yelling "Don't Care. Don't Care. Don't Care" and then you just CAN'T read it? That's how I feel about this book. Don't Care. Don't Care. Don't Care. Sorry. ( )
1 voter miriamparker | Mar 19, 2009 |
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Pompeii never had it so bad. Rick Koppes knows a world is ending. The only question is, will he end with it? An editor at Byzantium Press for the last quarter century, he has watched his small, classy publishing house get gobbled up, first by an American publishing giant and then by Multimedia Entertainment, the Hollywood wing of Bruno Hindemann's German media empire. His editing colleagues are being downsized, his authors axed, and in a world where the cultural wallpaper is screaming, he himself hangs on by a fingernail?the latest work of his sole best-selling author, pop psychologist Walter Groth, is racing off bookstore shelves. And that's just where his problems begin?after all, Multimedia is about to make his ex-wife, a publishing executive at another house, his boss, his assistant wants his authors, and a woman who claims her father dropped the bomb on Nagasaki insists he publish her woeful memoir. Koppes, who came of age in the sixties, is an editor slowly running off the rails. In the six episodes of The Last Days of Publishing, he refights the Vietnam War in a Chinese restaurant, discovers that the paleontological is political in a natural history museum, mixes it up with a flamboyant literary agent who went underground decades earlier, and encounters a hippie cultural oligarch on the forty-fifth floor of Multimedia's transnational entertainment headquarters. Tom Engelhardt, himself a publishing veteran, has produced a tumultuous vision of the new world in which the word finds itself hustling for a living. By turns hilarious, sardonic, and poignant, his novel deftly captures the ways in which publishing, which has long put our world between covers but has seldom been memorialized in fiction, is being transformed.

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