Another Life: A Memoir of Other People

Another Life: A Memoir of Other People is an autobiography written by Simon & Schuster publisher Michael Korda and published in the United States in 1999. In this memoir Korda gives an insider account of the world of publishing from the late 1950s through 1990s and creates intimate portraits of the authors, editors, and celebrities he has worked with over the decades.

Another Life: A Memoir of Other People
AuthorMichael Korda
PublisherRandom House
Publication date
1999
ISBN9780679456599

Synopsis

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In Another Life: A Memoir of Other People describes the process of book publishing from the acquisition of a book or author through editing and publication of a manuscript. Korda shares anecdotes about the publishing lunch and anecdotes about working with celebrities like Joan Crawford, Ronald Reagan and agent Irving Lazar. Korda also shares lessons he has learned about the business of publishing.

A good portion of the book describes the changes in the publishing industry over the decades. Korda profiles the publisher, editors and executives that worked for Simon & Schuster such as Robert Gottlieb, Richard E. Snyder, Joni Evans and others. He also gives an account of Simon & Schuster's buy-out by Gulf+Western in 1975 and the rise of publishing mergers and consolidation beginning in the 1970s. He writes about trends in the history of publishing during this time such as the rise of the chain superstores and the changes to publishing due to the rise of technology.

Korda views that publishing is a "reactive business" and that editors and publishers do not make taste or determine people's political views or affect social change but responds to what may be already there. In the book he uses the example of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin. Korda's contention isn't that Stowe affected opinions but made apparent opinions that were already felt by the majority on the subject of slavery and brought it to the foreground.

Reviews and commercial reception

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The memoir was received warmly by the press. Publishers Weekly described the book " a more candid, engaging and warmly knowledgeable survey of the past 40 years of American publishing cannot be imagined."[1] The New York Times wrote, "The recollection of his adventures in the book trade is a joy to read not only because Korda knows how to tell a good story but also because he never forgets that it is not in the nature of book publishers 'to harbor negative thoughts,' because 'the lifeblood of publishing is enthusiasm, after all, not caution.'[2] Kirkus Reviews called it, "more entertaining than lunch with a power editor at the Four Seasons Grill--full of delicious gossip plus a lesson or two in book publishing.[3]

In 2012 the book was profiled in The New Yorker under What We Are Reading by Michael Agger. Agger states the book "stands as an idiosyncratic history of book publishing’s shift from small, founder-driven houses into a junior wing of the entertainment industry."[4]

Content

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Authors and celebrities profiled

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Editors, agents and publishers

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Publication

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Another Life: A Memoir of Other People was first published in hardcover by Random House in 1999.[5] A trade paperback edition came out in 2000.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "ANOTHER LIFE by Michael Korda". Publishers Weekly.
  2. ^ "Adventures in the Book Trade". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
  3. ^ "ANOTHER LIFE by Michael Korda". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 2016-04-02.
  4. ^ Agger, Michael (17 September 2012). "What We Are Reading" Michael Korda". The New Yorker.
  5. ^ Korda, Michael (1999). Another Life: A Memoir of Other People. Random House. ISBN 9780679456599.
  6. ^ Korda, Michael (2000). Another Life: A Memoir of Other People. Random House. ISBN 9780385335072.
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