Falling Out Of Fashion | 
enlarge | Author: Karen Yampolsky Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corp Category: eBooks
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Rating: 38 reviews Sales Rank: 2588
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Pages: 275 Number Of Items: 1
Dewey Decimal Number: 813 ASIN: B002BTT0UO
Publication Date: June 1, 2008
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description In the bestselling tradition of The Devil Wears Prada, Karen Yampolsky-s hilarious and disarmingly candid debut goes deep inside the glossy, glamorous, and completely ruthless world of magazine publishing, where bitchiness and betrayal are always in vogue, and this month-s hotshots are just one dud issue away from a pink slip and a one-line career obit on Page Six-As a teenager at a prestigious prep school, Jill White studied her roommate-s magazines, filled with airbrushed-beyond-recognition photos of whisper-thin blondes who hadn-t finished a meal since third grade. She dreamed of one day starting a magazine of her own that would feature women of all sizes and colors-smart, witty, real women with aspirations beyond tinier thighs and shinier hair. Flash forward several years and a couple of giant leaps up the career ladder, and Jill has it all. Jill magazine is a huge hit, and her fabulous life comes complete with free designer clothes, an abundance of celeb friends, a shamelessly huge salary, and a framed Time magazine cover in her office featuring her beaming face over the legend, -Jill White, Media Wunderkind.- Now that mega-successful Nestrom Media has taken over Jill-s parent company, its future should be assured. Jill shares the fifteenth floor of the Nestrom building with illustrious Fashionista magazine, and the Nestrom suits are panting with admiration for both Jill and Jill. But the ashes from the postcoital cigarette have barely hit the floor before Jill-s new bosses start barking about getting ad revenue up and toning down articles like -His penis is not a toy-or is it?- in favor of fluff pieces with the reality star du jour. What smelled like team spirit devolves into a bitter game of manipulation and backstabbing. With Ellen Cutter, the blond, bland, Bergdorfed CEO of Nestrom Media, and Liz Alexander, Jill-s publisher (and Ellen-s conniving sidekick) suddenly aligned against Jill, plus a paranoid new managing editor with an addiction to spying, the situation is as grim as the magazine-s decidedly unfabulous new offices. Reluctant to jump ship, and equally reluctant to watch as her baby morphs into yet another cheesy rag, Jill fights back, even as Ellen and Liz plot her next move for her. With her name, her creation, and her future all on the line, Jill realizes mean girls don-t get left behind in high school-they grow up and work in publishing- Advance Praise for Falling Out of Fashion-Karen Yampolsky writes with humor, verve, and heart. In Jill White, she-s created an utterly compelling heroine, whose spectacular rise, fall, and rebirth as one of the fashion world-s most talented personalities makes for fantastic reading-especially as Jill remains committed to her passions in the face of the industry-s most supreme bitches. If you liked The Devil Wears Prada, you-ll love Falling Out of Fashion!- --Holly Chamberlin, author of The Summer of Us
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
great read! September 4, 2010 bookgirl (Colorado) Fabulous read and not as boring as the usual "chick lit" that I have grown acustommed to.
Needs a good editor August 20, 2010 C. Kim I got this as a Kindle freebie, which tends to instantly lower my expectations, but maybe I should have gone even lower. This book is just dull. It reads more like a teenage girl's diary than a novel. It tries to be hip and funny and edgy and insider-y and cool, but it's just plain dull. Obviously the writer has no idea what the New York publishing world is like. The narrator is whiny and weak and also somehow a mega-celebrity magazine editor? She started her own magazine but is cowed by some witchy bosses whose only goal in life is to conspire against her to ruin her life? The plot goes from childish to just plain dumb as things unravel. And the only the names have been changed paralleling of the Jane magazine/Jane Pratt story is so obvious its ridiculous. If Jane Pratt really did have anything to do with this (as some reviewers have speculated) I've lost all respect for her.
And don't get me started on mundane writing, unimaginative dialogue and grammar errors. A good editor would have gone a long way toward punching this up to the level of decent chick lit.
Ho-hum August 16, 2010 Laurie Gold (Dallas, TX USA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
The Devil Wears Prada didn't do much for me. The idea of writing about the experience of working for one of fashion's most notorious bosses was terrific. Lauren Weisberger's writing style and ability...not so much. I had higher hopes for Karen Yampolsky's Falling Out of Fashion, a 2007 roman à clef about her ex-boss, Jane Pratt, because I faithfully read the snarky and irreverent Jane magazine on a regular basis. I liked Yampolsky's book more than I did Weisbergers, but not by much. Had it not been a free download for Kindle last month, I'd have felt ripped off because the book reads less like a work of fiction than it does a book-length "as told to" biography of Jane Pratt, where only the names have been changed to protect the guilty.
The details of her protagonist's life are presented in a matter of fact fashion, the good, the bad, and the selfish, and the honesty is never begrudging, but that positive quality is also its main flaw. If you're a true Jane Pratt watcher, you probably know the answers to the "who is she writing about?" guessing game presented in the book, and if you're more casually interested, try Wikipedia. But there's really no need to read the book itself as it's impossible to separate the fictional Jill White from the real Jane Pratt. For a work of fiction, that's an unsurmountable problem.
Falling out of fashion August 5, 2010 janice i enjoyed this book. It shows a strong woman in Jill, and how working with women can be a back stabbing experience.
Fun Read August 4, 2010 Dolly I really enjoyed this book! I probably would've even paid for it, but the fact that it was free was an added bonus. It's a fun "beach read".
Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
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