How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (memoir)
2001 memoir by Toby Young / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (2001) is a memoir by Toby Young about his failed five-year effort to make it in the United States as a contributing editor at Condé Nast Publications' Vanity Fair magazine. The book alternates Young's foibles with his ruminations about the differences in culture and society between the United States and England, and specifically between New York City and London.
Author | Toby Young |
---|---|
Publisher | Little, Brown & Co |
Publication date | 2001 |
ISBN | 9780306811883 |
The book depicts Young's relationship with various British and American journalists, including Julie Burchill, Anthony Haden-Guest, Tina Brown and Harold Evans (who at one point threatens to sue him) and Vanity Fair's own Graydon Carter. Young also describes awkward run-ins with American celebrities including Nathan Lane, Mel Gibson and Diana Ross. Throughout the book, Young describes being tormented by his friend "Alex de Silva" (speculated to be Sacha Gervasi),[1] a former colleague of Young's who manages to succeed in America in every way that Young does not.
The title of Young's book is a parody of the title of Dale Carnegie's 1937 perennial bestseller, How to Win Friends and Influence People; a parody by Irving Tressler titled How to Lose Friends and Alienate People was also published that same year.[2] Young's book does not reference either Carnegie's or Tressler's works.