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Could this rookie author be Starbucks' next choice?
So if that's the case, which book is the most likely candidate for the Starbucks seal? A quick search through FSG's spring catalog provided the most likely candidate: RULES FOR SAYING GOODBYE by Katherine Taylor (left), written up at Publishers Marketplace as "invoking the spirit of Melissa Bank and Curtis Sittenfeld" - both bestselling authors who appeal to the upmarket, NPR-listening crowd that Starbucks covets as its customers. Editor Courtney Hodell (then at HarperCollins, now at FSG) bought Taylor's debut in April 2005 from Elizabeth Sheinkman (then with Elaine Markson, now in London at Curtis Brown) and Taylor went with when Hodell switched employers. The book's pitch? "a young woman coming of age and becoming entangled in unsuitable jobs and men before she finds her way, exploring themes of tragedy and disappointment, homesickness and displacement, as well as the dynamics of contemporary middle class American family life." So will Taylor's novel, once it's published in May, appear in coffee shops everywhere? "I'd love for that to be the case - Katherine's novel is terrifically deserving! - but I haven't heard a thing about it," said Hodell when reached by email. "From your mouth to God's ear." Email This Post |
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