October 4, 2015

Guest Post + Giveaway: Copygirl by Anna Mitchael and Michelle Sassa

Hey everyone! Today I'm spotlighting a great new book that's releasing this coming week! Read on for more info on the book, an awesome guest post by one of the authors - and don't forget to enter to win your own copy!


Copygirl
Author: Anna Mitchael and Michelle Sassa
Genre: Women's Fiction/Contemporary Fiction
Release Date: October 6, 2015
Publisher: Berkley

Description:

Mad Men meets The Devil Wears Prada in this lively debut about a young woman working at the hippest ad agency in New York...

So. You want to work in advertising. The glitz, the glamour, the cocktail-fueled brainstorming sessions and Xbox breaks. Sounds like a dream job, right?

Wrong. The reality can be a nightmare. There are five simple rules for succeeding in the ad world—and I think I’ve already broken every single one…

1) Never let them see you cry. Even if your best friend breaks your heart. And posts it all over social media.

2) Be one of the boys. And, if you were born with the wrong equipment, flaunt what you've got to distract them while you get ahead.

3) Come up with the perfect pitch in an instant—or have your resumĂ© ready to go at all times.

4) Trust no one. Seriously. If you don't watch your back, they'll steal your ideas, your pride, even your stapler.

5) Most importantly, don’t ever, under any circumstances, be a CopyGirl.

Trust me. I know…
 

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/24611706-copygirl?ac=1


Mad Men vs Ad Women
by Michelle Sassa

Psst. Can you keep a secret? Mad Men was my favorite TV show. Like ever. Shocker, I know, since I am an advertising copywriter. And my debut novel Copygirl chronicles the (ahem) fictional exploits of a female copywriter trying to beat the boys’ club at their own inane game of keep-away. Not unlike Mad Men’s Peggy Olson.

So, not a shocker, really, (and not a bummer) that reviewers have made comparisons between my book and the dearly departed series about a male-driven ad agency in the 1960’s. The brilliant author Sarah Bird called Copygirl a ‘modern twist on Mad Men’ and I didn’t even have to use my psychic powers to get her to say that. Then Publishers Weekly said, ‘Here’s what happens when girl power storms Mad Men…wickedly funny and smartly sweet,’ and my co-author Anna was so excited about the comparison, she wanted to have that critic’s babies. Even though she is totally done having kids.

But even though my story and that acclaimed TV series both have the advertising world as their backdrop, my real inspiration wasn’t Mad Men but rather Ad Women. As in the ad women I was lucky enough to meet in my career, plus the ones who lit the way, blazing through the glass ceiling wielding pens like blowtorches. The real Peggy Olson’s had to work twice as hard as men, often for half the glory and pay. We really have come a long way, baby, but even in the last two decades I still saw sexism that might even make Don Draper blush.

In my first advertising job, I was expected to water my boss’ plants, shop for his dress shirts and buy gifts for his mother. Fine, I was paying my dues as a lowly assistant, but the last straw was when he pinched my butt. Needless to say, I let that pig’s plants die.

Moving up the ranks of the creative department should have shielded from such chauvinism, right? Wrong. I can’t even count how many times I got sent into new business pitches to ‘chick up the room.’ When it was time to write for Summer’s Eve, Midol or Maidenform, you can bet they didn’t ask the boys’ club. But we have to decide how we’re going to fight and I decided to band together with the women around me and make sure I was doing work that couldn’t be ignored. And the bright side to ‘chicking up a room’ means sometimes you get sent to Paris for a toilet paper project aimed at females….and in between all the croissant-stuffing and cafĂ© au lait-sipping, you get to team up with the chick you’ll write novels with a decade later. Score one for the girls’ club.

Still, even after being sent to France, there was only so far some at that ad agency wanted to see me go. One partner actually told me to my face that there would never be a female creative director at his agency! But the clients loved my work, so he was forced to pay me like one anyway, and there was sweet satisfaction in watching all
the copygirls who came after me rise up to take that title. True, what they say, success is the best revenge.

So props to Mad Men, but mad love to Ad Women. Because when someone tells us we can’t, it only makes us want to show them we can. They say it’s the journey, not the destination, and one of my favorite parts of Copygirl is that it’s a celebration of the people—men and women—who help a heroine on her climb. Because in the ad world and this whole mad world, we do get by with a little help from our friends. And the truth is every bit as inspiring as a TV show. 
Anna Mitchael is a Louisiana-born writer who now lives on a ranch in Texas with her family, lots of cattle and a one-eyed dog. She is the author of a memoir entitled Just Don’t Call Me Ma’am, a monthly magazine column and a blog on positive living. She often writes about the modern female experience, hope, perseverance and the comfort of coyotes. 
Author Links:


Michelle Sassa is a freelance writer who has created memorable ad campaigns for brands like Coca-Cola, Reebok and New York Road Runners. She lives with her husband and three kids by the Jersey Shore, where she is an avid soccer player, rock music aficionado, and disciple of stupid humor. CopyGirl is Michelle's first novel.

Author Links:
Giveaway: (1) Finished paperback of Copygirl - Open to US only!







 

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for this unique novel which interests me greatly. saubleb(at)gmail(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
  2. Really looking forward to reading it, thanks so much for the chance

    ReplyDelete