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Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time
A Memoir
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$11.99Price
$15.99 CADFormat
Format:
ebook (Digital original) $11.99 $15.99 CADThis item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around June 2, 2006. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.
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Fresh out of college and following a brief and disastrous stint playing minor league baseball, David Goodwillie moves to New York intent on making his mark as a writer.
Arriving in Manhattan in the mid-nineties, Goodwillie quickly falls into one implausible job after another. He becomes a private investigator, imagining himself as a gumshoe, a hired gun—only to realize that he’s more adept at bungling cases than at solving them. When, in his stint as a freelance journalist, he unveils the Mafia in a magazine exposé, he succeeds only in becoming a target of their wrath. As a copywriter for a sports auction house, he imagines documenting the great histories hidden in priceless artifacts but finds himself forced to write about a lock of Mickey Mantle’s hair. Even when he seems to break through, somehow becoming the sports expert at Sotheby’s auction house—appearing on major news networks, raking in a hefty salary—he’s lured away by the promise of Internet millions…just in time for the dot-com crash.
Teeming with the vibrancy of a city in hyperdrive, Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time recounts a dizzying and enthralling search for authenticity in a cynical, superficial—and suddenly dangerous—age.
In his heartbreaking and hilarious struggle to become a big-city writer, Goodwillie becomes something more: an important voice of the lost generation he so elegantly describes.
Arriving in Manhattan in the mid-nineties, Goodwillie quickly falls into one implausible job after another. He becomes a private investigator, imagining himself as a gumshoe, a hired gun—only to realize that he’s more adept at bungling cases than at solving them. When, in his stint as a freelance journalist, he unveils the Mafia in a magazine exposé, he succeeds only in becoming a target of their wrath. As a copywriter for a sports auction house, he imagines documenting the great histories hidden in priceless artifacts but finds himself forced to write about a lock of Mickey Mantle’s hair. Even when he seems to break through, somehow becoming the sports expert at Sotheby’s auction house—appearing on major news networks, raking in a hefty salary—he’s lured away by the promise of Internet millions…just in time for the dot-com crash.
Teeming with the vibrancy of a city in hyperdrive, Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time recounts a dizzying and enthralling search for authenticity in a cynical, superficial—and suddenly dangerous—age.
In his heartbreaking and hilarious struggle to become a big-city writer, Goodwillie becomes something more: an important voice of the lost generation he so elegantly describes.
Genre:
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"[An] exuberant and rollicking first memoir . . . one that restores lightness, honesty and enthusiasm to the genre."
—New York Post
- On Sale
- Jun 2, 2006
- Page Count
- 356 pages
- Publisher
- Algonquin Books
- ISBN-13
- 9781565128286
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