But what if my old boss is pissed? Episode 305: Workplace Memoir with Cate Doty
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Y’all, it’s an uber-informative, down in the trenches episode about writing memoir when it feels like your topic is on the lighter side—but of course, no truly successful memoir ever stays on the surface. Cate Doty is the author of Mergers and Acquisitions: Or, Everything I Know About Love I Learned on the Wedding Pages. She is a writer and former editor at The New York Times, where she covered the news of food, weddings, business, New York, and more. To write Mergers and Acquisitions, Cate had to look at what was in some ways an obvious story—I fell in love at the NYT while working on the Wedding pages!—to the real story of growing up in an iconic newsroom and learning about what makes relationships get as far as the wedding pages—and then get past that one day. She had to find ways to dig into her past, and to write about real people she still loves and respects (and a few she doesn’t). And she had to accept that writing about the NYT probably means you’re not working there again.And then she had to answer all my questions about it! You’re going to love it.Links from the pod:Jenny 8. Lee’s memoir The Fortune Cookie ChroniclesThe little church around the corner#AmReadingCate:Kaye Gibbons: Ellen Foster, A Cure for Dreams, Charms for an Easy LifeHaving and Being Had, Eula BissLearning in Public, Courtney E. MartinKJ:Arsenic and Adobo, Mia P. ManansalaOther books we mentioned:To Tell You the Truth, Gilly MacMillanAdmissions: A Memoir of Surviving Boarding SchoolAlexander McCall Smith’s Isabel Dalhousie / The Sunday Philosophy Club booksFind out more about Cate: https://www.catedoty.com and follow her on Instagram: @CateDotyHey—have you been spending small amounts on short term classes, watching videos and using up every possible opportunity for free feedback? Reworking the same pages over and over in your writing group? Are you starting to feel like you’re stuck in one stage of the process? Maybe it’s time to consider making a bigger investment in your career and working with an Author Accelerator Book Coach. No one can guarantee that you’ll write a book that will snag an agent or a excite an editor. But a coach can help you move forward, finish a book or proposal you’re proud of and approach the next stage of the process like a pro. I kmow it helped me! If that sounds like something you need, visit https://www.authoraccelerator.com to get matched with a coach who can help you. This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit amwriting.substack.com/subscribe