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Exit Interview

The Life and Death of My Ambitious Career

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A candid, intensely funny memoir of ambition, gender, and a grueling decade inside Amazon.com, from the author of Nothing Good Can Come from This.
"A unique and brilliant book." —Oliver Burkeman, author of Four Thousand Weeks

What would you sacrifice for your career? All your free time? Your sense of self-worth? Your sanity?
In 2006, Kristi Coulter left her cozy but dull job for a promising new position at the fast-growing Amazon.com, but she never expected the soul-crushing pressure that would come with it.
In no time she found the challenge and excitement she'd been craving—along with seven-day workweeks, lifeboat exercises, widespread burnout, and a culture driven largely by fear. But the chase, the visibility, and, let's face it, the stock options proved intoxicating, and so, for twelve years, she stayed—until she no longer recognized the face in the mirror or the mission she'd signed up for.
Unsparing, absurd, and wickedly funny, Exit Interview is a rare journey inside the crucible that is Amazon. It is an intimate, surprisingly relatable look at the work life of a driven woman in a world that loves the idea of female ambition but balks at the reality.

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    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2023

      In 2006, Coulter (Nothing Good Can Come from This) left a secure, uneventful job for the excitement of working for Amazon.com and instead discovered seven-day workweeks, burned-out colleagues, and a culture of fear. Here's why she stayed and why she finally left. With a 50,000-copy first printing. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2023
      A firsthand look at the jungle that is Amazon.com. When Coulter began her career at Amazon in 2006, the company was a dynamic upstart, revolutionizing the way that books were marketed and sold. The author's previous job in publishing had been safe but dull, and an offer from Amazon sounded like an opportunity to gain a foothold in an exciting business, with stock options. She soon realized that it was an extremely high-pressure environment, with impossible deadlines, endless streams of meetings, and unintelligible language and directives. It was also a very macho culture, with sexism hiding behind a screen of liberal pieties. Coulter liked the idea of blazing a trail but started to wonder if the enormous personal cost was worth it. As the technology evolved and the company constantly expanded, the demands increased--and then increased again, until Amazon took over her entire existence. At the same time, Amazon was changing from a company that everyone loved to a behemoth that everyone loved to hate. Coulter offers a wide variety of horror stories about working with awful people on ethically questionable projects, but somehow she maintains a humor about the absurdity of it all. She realizes that she was trying to cope with the pressure by drinking too much but managed to stop before going over the edge (she addresses these issues in her 2018 collection of essays Nothing Good Can Come From This). Coulter eventually decided that she had to escape, although breaking the bonds turned out to be more difficult than anticipated. During her time there, she writes, "Amazon supplied me with a high-grade lunacy I didn't know I needed until I touched it and my ambition bloomed like neon ink in water." Thankfully, she eventually got over the fence, 12 years after signing on, and she left with her sanity and her soul largely intact. With wry humor, Coulter provides candid insights about life, love, and gender as well as surviving a toxic workplace.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2023
      At first glance, Exit Interview may seem to be the tell-all Amazon expos� we've all not-so-secretly been waiting for, and while readers hoping for an inside peek at the world's largest company will not be disappointed, some may be surprised to find that Coulter's carefully paced memoir is much more about human journeys than digital or economic ones. Writing with concision and thoughtfulness, Coulter's ruminations on her time at Amazon are at once whip-smart and quietly devastating as she navigates her own sense of self and ambition within the whirlpool of gender politics of the modern business world. In some ways, Exit Interview is a familiar story, Shakespearean in its inevitable turn toward tragedy as the author begins to lose herself in her desire to grow, succeed, and belong. But even as a past version of herself crumbles and transforms, Coulter's voice is steady, compelling, and entirely her own.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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