Like most journalists, I'm a junkie for journalism books. So when The New York Times reviews a new novel about the newspaper business twice in the same week, using words like "splendid," "spectacular," "marvelous" and "hilarious," I pay attention. When one of those raves, on the front of the Sunday Book Review, comes from the terrific Christopher Buckley, I'm on Amazon ordering the book before I even make it to the jump.
The book is "The Imperfectionists," by Tom Rachman, and it lives up to the effusive praise. It's the tale of a newspaper, newsroom and newspeople in decline from a glorious past that reads, as they say, as if it was ripped from today's headlines. Or at least today's Romenesko headlines. It's a hoot, not the least because it gets so many details of the news business and the characters who populate it so right.
The book's unnamed Rome-based English-language daily bears more than a passing resemblance to the International Herald Tribune—in fact, it bears more than a passing resemblance to just about any newsroom you can think of. It's filled with a menagerie of newsroom characters, lovingly lampooned: the swashbuckling foreign correspondent, the pathologically bitter copy-desk lifer, the grammar and style Nazi, the burn-out case, the bloodless corporate "suit," the clueless boy publisher, the slightly too-slick executive editor. And so on.
They're all there, and they cleverly interact in what amounts to a series of short stories about each character, all skillfully interlocked to tell the larger story. Rachman does an amazing job of bringing these people and their travails to life, and he gives each chapter a nifty little twist at the end to make the reader smile, or frown, or raise an eyebrow.
The "Imperfectionists" ranks up there with Evelyn Waugh's infamous "Scoop" and Calvin Trillin's underrated "Floater" as books that get the workings of the journalism racket just right and nail the oddities and frailties of the news business and the people who inhabit it. Appearing now, as the industry goes through wrenching change, Rachman's wonderful book is perfectly timed.
"The Imperfectionists" is a loving eulogy for journalism as we thought we knew it. It may be the last great newspaper novel, celebrating a world that—as the book documents in its bittersweet way—is rapidly fading away. Don't miss it.
Thanks for the recommendation! Got it on my to-read list.
Posted by: Alexisgrant | May 12, 2010 at 07:06 AM
I read the review in the paper, obviously, but now you have motivated me to put it in my Amazon shopping cart. Thanks. O
Posted by: young Owen | May 12, 2010 at 11:34 AM
Reading The Imperfectionists now on my Kindle. You're right about the almost searing accuracy of his portrayal of newsroom types, Mark. Will be interesting to see what sort of fiction emerges from the emerging new worlds of news...
Posted by: Bill Mitchell | May 12, 2010 at 12:56 PM
Sounds great. But I think I'll go to my struggling independent bookstore to buy it. Maybe that way there will be a few more years before the last great book on bookstore owners.
Posted by: OC Travel | May 12, 2010 at 02:34 PM
"Deadline Man" by Jon Talton is a must read
Posted by: Allenweiner | February 03, 2011 at 11:54 AM