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Break in Case of Emergency
Break in Case of Emergency: A novel | Jessica Winter
20 posts | 21 read | 29 to read
An irreverent and deeply moving comedy about friendship, fertility, and fighting for ones sanity in a toxic workplace. Jen has reached her early thirties and has all but abandoned a once-promising painting career when, spurred by the 2008 economic crisis, she takes a poorly defined job at a feminist nonprofit. The foundations ostensible aim is to empower women, but staffers spend all their time devising acronyms for imaginary programs, ruthlessly undermining one another, and stroking the ego of their boss, the larger-than-life celebrity philanthropist Leora Infinitas. Jens complicity in this passive-aggressive hellscape only intensifies her feelings of inferiority compared to her two best friendsone a wealthy attorney with a picture-perfect family, the other a passionately committed artistas does Jens apparent inability to have a baby, a source of existential panic that begins to affect her marriage and her already precarious status at the office. As Break in Case of Emergency unfolds, a fateful art exhibition, a surreal boondoggle adventure in Belize, and a devastating personal loss conspire to force Jen to reckon with some hard truths about herself and the people she loves most. Jessica Winters ferociously intelligent debut novel is a wry satire of celebrity do-goodism as well as an exploration of the difficulty of navigating friendships as they shift to accommodate marriage and family, and the unspoken tensions that can strain even the strongest bonds. From the Hardcover edition.
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AprilMae
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Picked up this book today, sounds interesting (but that might also be my migraine talking....)

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Victoriahoperose
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Mehso-so

This was a cute book about friendship and relationships in general. It had some “devil wears Prada” vibes in it. I just didn‘t love any of the characters and I feel like that was important for this book. I couldn‘t relate to the way they interacted and dealt with their issues. It was cute and wrapped up well, but not my as good as I thought it would be.

21 likes1 stack add
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BittersweetBooks
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She saw herself at the edge of a diving board hanging over an empty pool. She could feel the tingle in her toes, the last effervescent vertiginous moment before her feet pushed off, the board rippling 🚺

8 likes2 stack adds
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BTussey
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I have been in that meeting!

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tholmz
Pickpick

What a ride. Reminds me of offices / bosses I've had. Really strong writing, though hard to wade through at times.

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ReviewsMayVary
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Bailedbailed

It just didn't grab me. Saving for another time.

rubyslippersreads Goes perfectly with the mug, though. 😀 7y
6 likes1 comment
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kbuggle
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Haven't heard much about this except my sister said she was pleasantly surprised, so let's do it.

12 likes1 stack add
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kerry
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At the library for literacy tutoring and my student is running late. Of course I left my book at home... what do we know of this one, littens?

MicheleinPhilly I thought it had some tonal issues. As a satire of the start-up culture, it was hilarious. But it didn't really work for me as a whole. 7y
18 likes1 stack add1 comment
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whelanmaria
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Pickpick

This satirical novel is witty, charming, and clever, I couldn't put it down. The characters and loveable and hate-able and you love that you can hate them. When life in your early thirties is lemons -- gather your friends and make lemonade. Definitely a quick fun read for the upcoming weekend!

jessicarenee I like that cover! 8y
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whelanmaria

Jen had never asked her mother for her privacy, and Jen's mother freely gave it to her nonetheless.

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SarahK
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Pickpick

I've seen this book at the store and though, meh. Then I heard an interview with the author that peaked my interest, so I added it to my list of books to read. Then, there it was at the library, in the new book section (sometimes I luck out looking over there). This was a really good book. It was funny and ridiculous but also real.

Bookchipmunk This one is a must read! 8y
18 likes1 comment
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Bookchipmunk
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Weekend TBR: So excited that this hold came in because I've been listening to Jessica Winters on my favorite Slate podcasts. Plus two chapters left to read from last weeks selection, Originals. Originals is a compelling set of ideas, but I think it will be a pass for the leadership book group selections. As always, Winnie is ready! Aloha Friday 🌺🌅

MrBook 😻 8y
20 likes1 comment
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Lacythebookworm
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I picked up a few @penguinrandomhouse ARCs at conference. All were published in July or earlier in the year. (So not really advanced, but I'll take them!) Any recommendations on where to begin?

AThousandLives87 What does ARC stand for? 8y
suvata The only one that I read was that This Must Be The Place by Maggie O'Farrell. I thoroughly enjoyed it. 8y
suvata @bi-polar_reader ARC = Advance Reading Copy 8y
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Lacythebookworm @Bi-Polar_Reader Yes, what @suvata said! Publishers typically give them out in advance of the publication date to help spread the word about upcoming releases. 8y
candc320 I love Maggie O'Farrell, so you can't go wrong with her newest. 8y
LitHousewife The Maggie O'Farrell is really good. 8y
BookishMarginalia Ooooooh, such a pretty #bookstack! 8y
thegirlwiththelibrarybag Jonathan Unleashed! I loved it! It's little weird and Jonathan starts out being an unbearably special snowflake but once things get going 😂😍 8y
MrBook You have an extraordinary taste in books, fantastic 😊👏🏻👍🏻👌🏻! 8y
75 likes11 comments
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florinda3rs
Pickpick

In Break in Case of Emergency, first-time novelist Jessica Winter balances an earnest, emotional exploration of her protagonist‘s personal challenges with a snarky skewering of dysfunctional office culture. The depiction of Jen‘s workplace provides the bite--the endless, fruitless meetings, the jargon, the jockeying and the suspicion that no one really knows what‘s going on are familiar elements exaggerated (one hopes) for comic effect.

LitHousewife That sounds like a book I must read! 8y
8 likes1 comment
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Megabooks
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Mehso-so

2.5🌟This is 3 books, & they just didn't seem to integrate for me.

Book 1: Three friends from college, who are married & in their 30s now, try to get along in NYC.
Book 2: A woman works for a no-so-legit philanthropic organization.
Book 3: A couple struggles with fertility. (TW)

Everything about this book was just okay. Nothing really wrong, but no real spark either. I kind of slogged through the middle.

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Megabooks
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This book is just the right amount of amusing for me tonight after some rather painful dental work. ☹️ (If you've had a spinal fusion, floss even though it's painful because the cavities are worse.) 👄💸👎🏻

BookishFeminist 😕 Oh no! I hope you feel better soon. Dental work can be rough. 8y
Megabooks @BookishFeminist Thank you! I have severe TMJ from the same car accident that caused the spinal fusion. Just sucky/annoying. 8y
LauraBeth My teeth hate me so I can relate ☹️ hope you feel better and that book takes your mind off the pain 8y
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WordWaller I feel you! Genetics are against my teeth, so I have problems regardless of how good I take care of them! Feel better 💗 8y
Megabooks Thank you @LauraBeth and @WordWaller ! I'd never wish dental problems on anyone! They truly suck. ☹️ 8y
Hazel0303 Feel better!! And ahhhh The Hopefuls!!! Neither library has this in NY yet!! Do you live in heaven? 8y
Megabooks @Hazel0303 My library is awesome! I ❤️ it so hard! Thank you. 😃 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa Oh my! Feel better soon! And take care of your teeth, those things can kill you if you don't! 8y
62 likes2 stack adds8 comments
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Megabooks
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How do people feel about the category "women's fiction"? I don't like it because there's no corresponding "men's fiction", so does that mean the male experience is the universal experience? That's how I've always taken it. Thoughts? Pic courtesy of the US SSA website.

LeahBergen There was a "Men's Fiction" section in this old, used bookstore that I used to go to years ago. It was full of sea adventures, westerns and swashbucklers... All the stuff that I wanted to read! Ha! 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa I hate it! I clicked on it the first time I saw it thinking it was the Feminism section, like Woman's Studies in school, and instead got chick lit and romances. 🙄 8y
Em890 I'm not sure I've ever noticed a Women's Fiction section, but it does king of irritate me. Mostly because how many men are going to look at books in those sections even if they want to. Labeling it that way excludes a lot of possible readers 8y
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Megabooks That's interesting @LeahBergen ! I've never seen that. 8y
Megabooks @Riveted_Reader_Melissa Yes! Why assume that all women like that or that men wouldn't be interested! 8y
Megabooks @Em890 Exactly! There are a whole lot of men who wouldn't want to be seen browsing a women's section, but it may have books they would enjoy. Plus it cuts off the exposure of some women authors to wider audiences. 8y
BookishFeminist I hate it! It downplays women's experiences and lives & it lumps us into one giant category of "romance" and/or "fluffy stuff" (even if that isn't actually true of the fiction in the category). It's just a way to make "chick lit" sound more grown up & less sexist. Marketing women's experiences solely to women also ensures that men won't pick it up & keeps playing into the denigration of women's issues. 8y
BookishFeminist It also infuriates me how fiction written by women is marketed, full of pastel colors & flowers etc, even if the content inside has nothing to do with it. 8y
Notafraidofwords @BookishFeminist or as a memoir when it's a journalism focused. 8y
BookishFeminist @Notafraidofwords Yes, that too! Did you see the article about the North Korean journalist whose book was sold as a memoir? Infuriating. 8y
thatotherlisa When I'm feeling snarky, I kind of wish we could make "men's fiction" a thing. It could be all those books written by men about men's lives and experiences that we currently just label "fiction" and expect everyone to read. 8y
MLVReads I don't get it because who says what qualifies as "women's fiction"? Because writers like Gillian Flynn and Tana French aren't put in the category. So I also feel that it's a dig to readers who enjoy reading about love or friendship. Like it isn't important enough. 8y
Notafraidofwords @BookishFeminist yes. My heart broke for her. 8y
MrBook For an industry that relies on the written word, I am actually quite stunned at the poorly articulated genre names we have today. "Women's Fiction"? Aren't women in almost every book (and men vice versa)? "Literary Fiction"? Isn't all fiction literature? "Historical fiction"? Isn't it all history? 8y
HeatherBookNerd @BookishFeminist I was going to write all the things you already said so well. So ditto all that! 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @MLVReads Exactly! There is fiction and then there's that fluffy stuff for chick's. The funny part to me is a bunch of classics written by women Jane Austin or the Bronte's would probably be labeled as chick lit (women's lit) if it was released today. 8y
BookishFeminist Another one that I see with alarming frequency in the south, especially library booksales and used bookstores, is "ethnic fiction." Like, what? So denigrating. Also lumping all books written by or about Black people put in one category, even fiction, as if the Black experience should be removed from the rest of society & literature. 8y
OffTheBeatenShelf.com I'm really glad @BookishFeminist is already in this thread because I was going to tag her. You all said it best. I second everything shared here. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 8y
BookishFeminist @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I've seen Bronte & Austen included in women's fiction categories before! 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @BookishFeminist So Women's Fiction is basically anything written by a woman. We wouldn't want anyone accidentally picking up a book and thinking it looks good without them realizing it was written by a woman first. 😱 8y
BookishFeminist @Riveted_Reader_Melissa Nope, never. It's a public health concern. You might catch cooties, you know. 8y
BookishFeminist @thatotherlisa @LeahBergen I've seen halfhearted attempts at men's fiction before & it's all Tom Clancy etc. But I totally agree! I would definitely worry that the sarcasm would go over a lot of people's heads & there'd probably be a lot of men that'd be like "fuck yeah! Don't have to wade through that women's nonsense to find my military thrillers!" #notallmen ? 8y
HeatherBookNerd This categorization is totally baffling. Does Women's Fiction mean that the author is a woman? Or that the subject matter can presumably only be appreciated by women? (As if ALL women have identical interests.) Or that flowers and tea cups are on the cover? Or the books mention vaginas? So silly. 8y
Megabooks @HeatherBookNerd You hit my point pretty much exactly! 8y
becausetrains I mentioned "urban fiction" ? to @BookishFeminist and she literally roared ? She (and all y'all) should start a bookstore called Women's Fiction. ????? 8y
Megabooks @BookishFeminist I agree that it downgrades women's experiences and writing. It's as if women can't write "serious literature". Also lumping all POC as ethnic writing ??. As if writers of color didn't have enough problems getting their books seen as universal! 8y
Megabooks @BookishFeminist @Notafraidofwords I had not heard about the NK journalist. Nothing drives me more bonkers than women not being taken seriously! 8y
Megabooks @MLVReads What counts as women fiction seems to be so subjective. The book I tagged is a female buddy book, so a lot of people/stores would consider it "women's fiction", but then shouldn't war books (or something equally subjectively male) be men's fiction? 8y
itsbrb @BookishFeminist so glad you mentioned the North Korean journalist, just heard about that and it filled me with rage. Glad that I'm not the only one not happy with the genre!! 8y
HeatherBookNerd This whole thread makes me happy that Litsy exists. Book people are my people. 👍🏼 8y
TheWellReadOwl Lithub had an interesting, related piece last week about sexism in literary prizes. http://lithub.com/on-sexism-in-literary-prize-culture/ Great thread. ❤️ 8y
Caryl I ❤️ Litsy! What a great conversation. Thanks, all! 8y
43 likes33 comments
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Megabooks
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Look what my library was nice enough to get me! 😃📖😃📖😃 I just requested them Saturday. My library (other than its checkout policies) is simply the best! Now I have too much for the readathon lol!!

Hazel0303 This one might be hitting a little too close to home for me in some areas. 😕 Hopefully, it's still enjoyable for you though! 8y
Megabooks Ut oh @Hazel0303 ! There are a number of books I can't read for various reasons. I had a bout of depression in college, and I have a really hard time reading books about it. I think that's why I don't like Jenny Lawson's books. 8y
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shawnmooney
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