A Diary of The Lady: My First Year As Editor

A Diary of The Lady: My First Year As Editor

by RachelJohnson (Author)

Synopsis

'All I knew about "The Lady" was what all middle-class mothers of a certain age and income bracket knew about "The Lady". It was where you got a nanny from. End of.' When Rachel Johnson was appointed the new editor of the oldest women's weekly magazine in the world, she was facing the challenge of a lifetime. For a start, how do you become an editor when you've never, really, edited? How do you turn around a venerable title, full of gloomy articles on watery eyes and ads for walk-in baths, into a totally cookin' property ...during the worst recession EVER? And forget about doubling the circulation in a year at "The Lady" - what on earth do you WEAR to work when you've spent the last fifteen years sitting at home in sweatpants? As she puts on her best Bree Van der Kamp silk blouse and penetrates the time-capsule six-storey cream and pink HQ in Covent Garden - with its Fred West basement, Ladies' Smoking Room, Anne Frank Annexe and wall safe filled with custard creams - she soon realizes: if "The Lady" was ever to become more hip than hip replacement, it would need emergency surgery. And fast. This is Rachel's riotous and alarmingly frank account of her first year as her Ladyship, as she tackles redesigning the magazine, drags the title from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century, persuades big names to write for peanuts, attempts to sell advertising space to the bewildered executives of Astroglide (don't ask), tackles her dreaded intray, but above all tries to persuade her existing readers to keep going and new ones to hop on board. Will Rachel save "The Lady" - or sink it?

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 336
Publisher: Fig Tree
Published: 30 Sep 2010

ISBN 10: 1905490674
ISBN 13: 9781905490677

Media Reviews
HYSTERICAL. For the first time, everyone is talking about The Lady for reasons other than nannies -- Piers Morgan
Hilarious * Daily Mail *
A total romp, wonderfully readable, unflinchingly described -- Zoe Williams * Guardian *
Eye-poppingly comic -- Mark Lawson * Guardian *
Giddy, lively, Mitfordesque, hilarious * Observer *
Action-packed, entertaining, marvellously indiscreet. Johnson is everything you want in a diarist and has a compulsive habit of saying the wrong thing * Sunday Times *
Boisterous and captivating -- Roger Lewis * Sunday Express Books of the Year *
Made me laugh out loud and stay up so late reading it that I shot terribly on the first drive * Financial Times *
Surprisingly brilliant -- AA Gill
Author Bio
Rachel Johnson is married to Ivo Dawnay, has three children, and lives in London and Somerset. Her previous books include The Mummy Diaries and the international bestseller Notting Hell, both of which are published by Penguin.