Matt Beaumont e: A Novel
£8.50
An unforgettable first novel, an author to shout about, a campaign to ensure that everyone knows this is the funniest, sharpest read of the year.
Consisting entirely of staff emails, e spends a fortnight in the company of Miller Shanks, an advertising agency that scales dizzying peaks of incompetence. Among the cast are a CEO with an MBA from the Joseph Stalin School of Management, a Creative Director who is a genius, if only in his own head, designers and copywriters driven by breasts, beer or Bach Flower Remedies, and secretaries who drip honey and spit blood.
The novel is a tapestry of insincerity, backstabbing and bare-arsed bitchiness: that is to say, everyday office politics. Oh yes, and there is some work to be done too – the quest for advertising’s Eldorado, the Coca-Cola account.
e is sleazy, scurrilous and scabrously funny. It also contains a first-class joke about the Pope and sound advice on the maintenance of industrial carpet tiles.
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Additional information
Publisher | First Edition (2 Jan. 2007), HarperCollins Publishers Ltd |
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Language | English |
Paperback | 352 pages |
ISBN-10 | 000710068X |
ISBN-13 | 978-0007100682 |
Dimensions | 12.9 x 2.24 x 19.71 cm |
by Philip Procter
Great insider fly(BCC?)-on-the-email look into office life and the world of commercial advertising – Witty, great story and very 2000s before everything and everyone was cancelled so if you dont feel the need to write to your MP when a lad is ladish…or femine charachter is feminist – then this might be for you – very unique and sympathetic to everyone who has been in an office environment and a MUST for anyone in advertising! This is set out solely as Emails.
enjoy innit
by JoleneJolene
I absolutely loved it. This has to be the funniest book I have ever read. I used to work for an advertising agency, and all the characters and goings-on are real. Although it is a little dated in terms of technology, character and plot are beautifully conveyed through the email dialogue. E reveals the ineptitude, the shallowness, back-stabbing, dysfunctionality, profligacy and sheer unreadiness of the behind-the-scenes at an advertising agency. Many of us have pondered bizarre, ineffectual ads which have fleetingly appeared in the media. But the beauty of this book is that it isn’t just advertising – it could be any industry where groups of character-diverse, out-of-touch individuals are trying to win business.
by Roger Risborough
I’m on my second reading and second copy of E now. I lent my first copy to someone who laughed so much they forgot to return it. I laughed a lot both times. It’s very hard not to. This is a VERY funny book and a delight to read it again. The characters are all simultaneously hideous and highly addictive. The book is made up solely of e-mails within, and out of, wannabe advertising stars Miller Shanks as they haplessly lurch towards a pitch to Coca Cola. They’re still clinging to the old Eighties ideals of excess and ego, and the pattern of the e-mails is that you shamelessly crawl to those above you in the office hierarchy, and mercilessly bully everyone below you to stake-out your territory. Unrelenting self-promotion is the other prerequisite, as you’d expect from a bunch of Admen. The truth is that everyone is riven with hyper insecurity and insincerity and it’s hilarious to witness them all imploding.
by The Keen Reader
I read E Squared before reading this novel, which strictly could be described as its predecessor; however I didn’t find reading them in the “wrong” order to be detrimental. Some of the characters from E are in E Squared but there is sufficient background to be able to pick up the narrative as required without having to worry about any previous action.
The book is all email based, as is explained in other reviews. The whole action of the story is based around the email correspondence of various characters, mainly the characters based in an advertising agency pitching for some prestigious accounts, and trying not to make a mess of the accounts they already have. The people, if you have ever worked in a professional services firm, are horribly familiar – bitchy, nasty, two-faced, precious, petty, bullying, autocratic, self-serving in the main. The emails range from vitriolic (though ever so politely written in the correct office etiquette generally) to utter sucking up to the boss. Sigh … sadly all too familiar from some of the places I’ve been (un)lucky enough to have worked in in previous lives.
E is hilarious – there were a lot of `laugh out loud’ moments – for example, when one of the characters asked if it was all right if they came to a meeting in their Nirvana t-shirt, and the respondent said “Come as you are”. If you get that, you’ll find it as funny as I did.
The characters are so reminiscent of people that actually exist that it’s rather like the fascination of the horrible, reading this book – you know it’s all going to end up badly, but you can’t look away.
Thoroughly enjoyable – light, undemanding reading, but the storyline is entertaining, the characters are all too clearly drawn, and the reader is keen to know what happens next.
Totally recommended.
by Didier
95 reviews already as I’m writing this, 74 of which gave ‘E’ a 5-star rating… is there still need for more praise? Perhaps not, but I just couldn’t resist. Until a few years ago – until 2007 to be precise – I worked in advertising myself (as an account, I’m not sure if I qualified as ‘the sad git in accounts’ mentioned on the backcover), and back in 2000 when I first read this book I had to laugh out loud because it was so very very recognizable, the only thing missing seemed your typical financial director: always keen on blaming other people when clients protest invoices but never having met a client face-to-face themselves. I vividly remember sharing the book with colleagues, and not a single one of them wasn’t struck by the similarity with people we actually knew and had to work with every day. On the other side, I just as vividly remember the often mind-boggling lack of intelligence on the client side (think ‘Fawlty Towers’ in a marketing context and you’ll come close), so one could easily write a similar book from that perspective I guess.
Anyway, that was almost a decade ago and recently (don’t know exactly why) I took ‘E’ from my shelves again, opened it and was captivated once again from the very first page. In retrospect I found it perhaps more over the top than when I first read it, but just as funny, and what I failed to notice the first time struck me all the more now: this is really a very cleverly plotted novel! And as much as in epistolary novels dating back hundreds of years such as
Dangerous Liaisons (Penguin Classics)
the characters all come very much alive in their e-mails. If you want to know what life in advertising is like ‘E’ may not give you a trustworthy objective view (though it comes close), but it will definitely have you laughing out loud.