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Publish This Book: The Unbelievable True Story of How I Wrote, Sold and Published This Very Book

Publish This Book: The Unbelievable True Story of How I Wrote, Sold and Published This Very BookAuthor: Stephen Markley
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Category: Book

List Price: $14.99
Buy New: $7.98
as of 9/8/2010 22:51 CDT details
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New (29) Used (10) from $7.49

Seller: nyc0123
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 26 reviews
Sales Rank: 429713

Media: Paperback
Pages: 480
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 1.7

ISBN: 1402229356
Dewey Decimal Number: 070.50207
EAN: 9781402229350
ASIN: 1402229356

Publication Date: March 1, 2010
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9781402229350
  • Condition: New
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Dear Reader-
This is called the "back cover copy," and you are no doubt familiar with its purpose. It describes what the book is about, so you can decide if you want to read it.

Here's the problem, though: I can't even describe this book, and I wrote the damn thing.(1)

Basically, it's like this: fed up with the Byzantine quest of trying to publish a novel, I decide instead to cut to the chase and write a memoir about trying to publish a book-this book, to be precise.

Of course, now you're saying to yourself, "That is stupid," which is fair. But then you'll read it, and you'll say, "Damn, that was actually pretty good."

Because obviously it's about much more than just publishing a book. It's about life and love and friendship; politics, pop culture, and basketball; sex, drugs, and mild, inoffensive, slow-tempo Christian rock.(2)

It's about the pitfalls of narrating your life as it unfolds, freaking out when an agent actually (spoiler alert!) takes an interest in this bizarre experiment, and the surreal shock you undergo when a publisher actually buys it(3) and you suddenly realize that every secret drunk, drug, and sex story you've related will now be required reading for your parents, aunts, ex-girlfriends, and thousands of strangers who-you were kind of hoping-would never find out that you once accidentally shut your penis in a dresser drawer.(4)

And finally, but most importantly, it's about those tumultuous early years of adulthood-the years when hope and fear and rage broil together and the promise of youth still holds the capacity to inspire awe. This is a story of those struggles-to find your true voice in your work and in your life. And the best part?

You pretty much know it has a happy ending.(5) 2 It is not really about that last one.

3 And then later makes you write your own back cover copy even though you clearly do not know what you're doing.

4 Although I'll dodge a bullet there because I totally left that story out of the book.

5 Except for what happens to the puppy at the fertilizer plant. I admit, that part is kind of a downer.

(20100111)



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 26



5 out of 5 stars The Voice of Gen Y?   August 11, 2010
Melissa Romo
I officially now can get behind Stephen Markley's new book, Publish This Book: The Unbelievable True Story of How I Wrote, Sold, and Published This Very Book. I read close to 300 pages of it yesterday. I never read 300 pages in a single day. (No, I didn't do much of anything else, but at least I wasn't watching talk shows.) I also checked Amazon and noticed that he only has four- and five-star reviews so I won't embarrass myself by telling you how great it is.

I got the book on Monday and here was my first reaction: J---- C-----, this guy is only 26!!

So before I could write this, I had to get over the fact that he was born the same year that Madonna hit it big with "Like A Virgin" (or thereabouts) and I started shaving my legs. I also had to get over the fact that he's a full generation behind me, this thing called the "Millennials," and actually it was the first time I realized that MY generation was not THE generation, the new ones, the up-and-coming, the youngest wave of adults out there, the ones who point to older generations with their index finger and say to themselves "how uncool are they?" Now the "Millennials" are doing that to us. Yes, to us, the Gen-Xers. Remember when that Coupland book came out and all we Gen-Xers thought we were so cool? That was 1991. Yes, 20 years ago. We're done. I just looked up Coupland on Wikipedia and he's (I'm heaving here) half bald.

So Stephen, bravo. Really good book. It's funny as hell. I don't mind the dick jokes that much (though they kind of go on and on). I want to meet your friend Roger, but only after I've had more beer than him. And I feel pretty bad about Sarah (I read that chapter first), but in a "wake up and live your life" kind of way, which I think is what you were going for.

You will be "the voice of Generation Y" in no time. I'm sure of it. Unless there already is an official Voice of Gen Y. I don't know, I haven't been keeping track. But if not, you will be their Coupland. And all you Gen Yers will think you're cool until 20 years go by and Stephen Markley will be bald on Wikipedia and there will be some other "voice of Generation ____ ."

But all of that has nothing to do with my own quest to publish my own novel. In fact, I can't even read Stephen's novel within a two-hour time frame of starting work on my own novel because all my dialogue would turn into street trash talk with an abundance of profanity that my characters could never get away with. His hilarious, profane voice would just s--- all over my Charlotte Bronte kind of brooding moral saga voice.

All of this maybe is to say that my own blog here (the one you're reading, and you are the only one actually) is just a fledgling derivative of Stephen's book about publishing a book. The derivative of an idea that was thought of by a much younger writer and executed with much more confident use of the word "F---" than I could ever manage. But he's put in the work, clearly, so he deserves this. He's probably put in 10 more years' worth of work than I have on his writing, getting rejected, and repeating it over and over.

F---.

(See what I mean?)

From: www.thebookorbust.blogspot.com



5 out of 5 stars Funny and Worth The Read   July 25, 2010
tammy
Markley has written an original book about his life while being a young adult and a writer at the same time. The entire book is unconventional and very funny. Kudos to this first time author and looking forward to the next piece!


5 out of 5 stars Hilarious, poignant, brilliant...BUY IT!!!   July 20, 2010
Stephen Hines (Ohio USA)
This is easily one of the best books I've read in a LONG time. Even if you have no aspirations of becoming a writer, Markley's brilliantly funny and touching memoir will strike a chord with you. I can't say enough about this book!


5 out of 5 stars Incredible   July 19, 2010
David Kruger
This is the first time I've ever been moved to write an Amazon review of anything, in part because after reading this book I have a much better appreciation of just how difficult it is to succeed as a writer these days and I feel like it's worth giving a leg up to one of the rare authors who I feel really deserves it. The candid look behind the scenes at a young writer struggling not to let his idealism fade was just one of the elements of the book that I, as an aspiring author, found really interesting.

The book has a lot going for it - it captures what is a pivotal moment not only for Markley and his friends, but also in the consciousness of our nation and the generation that is now beginning to make waves. It is the bridge from youthful idealism and fantastic twentysomething humor to responsibility and adulthood. There is something for everybody in this book, Markley is relentlessly creative in switching up his narrative style and literary techniques, he certainly delivers on his promise that this book will not be boring. Even as he experiments across the spectrum of storytelling techniques in this memoir, he maintains a strong, consistent, irreverent, humorous voice throughout that brings the narrative together. And despite the book's tendency toward humor as its main vehicle for filling the pages, the book is still brimming with profound insights and thoughtful symbolic moments worthy of deeper consideration.

The comparison to Dave Eggers and A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius is directly made more than enough in the book itself, but if you're looking for a reference point I think Markley is spot-on: that's definitely what this book most reminded me of. This book is a fantastic read with nary a dull moment, a whole lot of genuine creativity, a refreshing sense of humor, and a lot of food for thought about youth, writing, love, and finding our way in life.



5 out of 5 stars So glad someone decided to Publish This Book!   July 6, 2010
Allyson K. Clark
It amazes me that a book with a spoiler right on its cover (obviously, the book gets published in the end) could be such a page turner. I couldn't put it down, didn't want to. That is what makes this book so great - yes it's about his quest to get his book published, but it surprises you by also being about so much more. I've been recommending this book to everyone I know.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 26


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