Leading Authors of Today's Magazine
  • Home
  • Editorial
  • Featured New Authors
  • Anthologies
    • Moguls Unleashed
      • Dr. Dashnay Holmes is a Dynamic Entrepreneur!
      • Dr. Jane Mukami
      • Dr. Demaryl Roberts-Singleton
      • Dr. Desirie Sykes
      • Dr. Terry Golightly
      • Dr. Shontae Davidson
      • Dr. Adrienne Velazquez
      • Dr. Nichole Pettway
      • Dr. Daniela Peel: Corporate Wellness
  • News and Updates
  • More
    • Multimedia
    • Author of the Month
    • Book Reviews
    • Interviews and Conversations
    • Community and Engagement
    • Writing Resources
    • Genre Explorations
No Result
View All Result
Leading Authors Of Today's Magazine
No Result
View All Result

Book Review: ‘Ambition Monster,’ by Jennifer Romolini

June 1, 2024
in Book Reviews
0
Home Book Reviews
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Book Review: ‘Ambition Monster,’ by Jennifer Romolini


AMBITION MONSTER: A Memoir, by Jennifer Romolini


This spring, the website LitHub published an essay about the lack of financial particulars in contemporary fiction. That piece stayed in my head as I read Jennifer Romolini’s spirited memoir about her transformation from an angry and self-destructive child of teen parents in working-class Philadelphia to a hard-charging fashion magazine editor and, later, a “Corporate Barbie” at a Fortune 500 tech company.

Although a work of nonfiction, the memoir, “Ambition Monster,” is at its most original when it grapples with the monetary calculations and status anxiety of a heroine who, unlike many denizens of the 21st-century mediascape, has neither a trust fund nor an Ivy League pedigree to fall back on.

Instead, pregnant, shotgun-married and a college dropout at age 21, the author seems poised to follow in the domestic footsteps of her mother. But a circuitous path leads her back to community college, then out of a stifling marriage. A collection of truly terrible boyfriends follows. Among them: a writer-musician who, unhappy about being broken up with, sends a photocopy of his middle finger, embellished with the words, “I now look at you as only a receptacle to put sperm.”

At a summer publishing course in her late 20s, Romolini makes the acquaintance of another world-class jerk: this one a “maverick” middle-aged publisher. Soon after, she washes up in New York City. There, she finds herself sharing his V.I.P. table at the nightclub Moomba, and, more generally, “submitting to sex not for pleasure but as an extension of my résumé, a gathering of useful information, a performance of independence, if not solely a means to numb out.”

It is ultimately through pavement pounding, not connections, that she lands her first editorial assistant job. But her ascent up the career ladder is slippery; after paying rent, Romolini has so little money left over that she resorts to making $3 rice and beans last two nights.

Even after landing a proper editor’s post, she discovers that she makes less than she did while waiting tables. Compelled to seek side gigs, she writes unlikely-to-win-a-Pulitzer features for Target’s in-house magazine with headlines like, “What’s Your Faucet Style?” Insecurities about her skill set and class background persist, exacerbated by the frequent experience of dating men with more success and fancier educations than her own.

But if the constant threat of precarity underscores her drive, Romolini makes the argument that it is actually childhood trauma — her early years were steeped in chaos and occasional violence — that accounts for her growing workaholism as she moves through her 30s and 40s. “Inside me is a hungry, terrified, security-craving goblin in the presence of whom I feel powerless; an ambitious monster who wants it all,” she writes.

Eventually, Romolini realizes her girlboss dreams and lands a C-suite job running the style pages of a legacy tech website. But even as she mocks the meaningless corporate lingo and “Hunger Games”-esque firings — “transitioned out” is the preferred dystopian terminology — her inability to put work away threatens to destroy her marriage.

Romolini’s honesty about her failings is laudable. Her propensity for overwork, however, is matched by a tendency to overwrite. We don’t, for instance, need to know that on Wednesday nights she and her future husband watch “Lost,” and a 26-page chapter on Romolini’s stint as a glorified caption writer at the shopping glossy Lucky might have been whittled by half.

She also packs on adjectives and clauses where just one or two would do. “In my work life, I am diligent, strategic, calculating, eyes on the prize; but after work I’m sloppy and not at all self-preserving; a pretend life-of-the-party girl, a girl who pretends she doesn’t care, the last person standing wherever I land,” reads one of countless prolix sentences.

However overstuffed, “Ambition Monster” offers an entertaining and highly relatable account of the struggle to avenge the people we once were. It also illuminates the empty promises of a life built on nothing but external metrics of achievement.

AMBITION MONSTER: A Memoir | By Jennifer Romolini | Atria | 304 pp. | $28.99



Read More

Previous Post

Interview with Yomi Adegoke on New Book The List

Next Post

Choosing children’s books that include and affirm disability experiences

Next Post
Choosing children’s books that include and affirm disability experiences

Choosing children's books that include and affirm disability experiences

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Random News

The best new science fiction books this month from Alastair Reynolds to Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson

The best new science fiction books this month from Alastair Reynolds to Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson

...

💜BTS diary 💜 any BTS army 🙋‍♀️💜

💜BTS diary 💜 any BTS army 🙋‍♀️💜

...

Interview: Kate Kruimink on her new novel Heartsease, “I don’t think you can get away from yourself as a writer. I think you give yourself away.”

Interview: Kate Kruimink on her new novel Heartsease, “I don’t think you can get away from yourself as a writer. I think you give yourself away.”

...

How I Wrote A #1 Bestseller with alt=

How I Wrote A #1 Bestseller with $0 and No Publisher

...

Success Of  Secret : Out Of the Chaos  ( Audio Book )

Success Of Secret : Out Of the Chaos ( Audio Book )

...

Author to speak on writing novels

Author to speak on writing novels

...

About us

Today's Author Magazine

Welcome to Today's Author Magazine, the go-to destination for discovering fresh talent in the literary world. We shine a light on new authors and captivating anthologies, providing readers with a diverse array of stories and insights. Here's a look at the vibrant categories that make up our magazine

RecentNews

Elevating Leadership, Empowering Women: The Journey of Dr. Janet Lockhart-Jones

Leading with Words: The Transformational Journey of Dr. Mark Holland

Faith, Healing, and Resilience: The Empowering Voice of Elaine King

Rising Beyond Bars: The Transformative Journey of Dr. Nichole Pettway

Categories

  • Anthologies
  • Author of the Month
  • Book Reviews
  • Community and Engagement
  • Editorial
  • Featured
  • Featured New Authors
  • Genre Explorations
  • Global Influence
  • How-to
  • Interviews and Conversations
  • Multimedia
  • News and Updates
  • Other
  • Uncategorized
  • Writing Resources

RandomNews

Corals, Sea Squirts, Sponges, Bryozoa, Comb Jellies, Marine Plants” by Andrey Ryanskiy

Ch. 24: The Book I Should Write

WRITING A SHORT STORY IN 3 DAYS⏳📖// week writing vlog challenge // my planning process + novel ideas

By the meter: A new anthology brings together verse rooted in Sri Lanka

New book highlights how the WTO protests changed Seattle and the world

  • Home
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Contact

© 2024 Today's Author Magazine. All Rights Are Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Moguls Unleashed
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2024 Today's Author Magazine. All Rights Are Reserved.