Uneducated A memoir of flunking out, falling apart, and finding my worth

Christopher Zara

Book - 2023

"For Christopher Zara, this is the professional minefield he has had to navigate since the day he was kicked out of his New Jersey high school for behavioral problems and never allowed back. From a school for "troubled kids," to wrestling with his identity in the burgeoning punk scene of the 1980s; from a stint as an ice cream scooper as he got clean in Florida, to an unpaid internship in New York in his thirties, Zara spent years contending with skeptical hiring managers and his own impostor syndrome before breaking into the world of journalism--only to be met by an industry preoccupied with pedigree. As he navigated the world of the elite and saw the realities of the education gap firsthand, Zara realized he needed to confr...ont the label he had been quietly holding in: what it looked like to be part of the "working class"--whatever that meant."--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Biography
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Christopher Zara (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 261 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780316268974
  • Author's Note
  • Prologue: Monopoly on the Twenty-Ninth Floor
  • Chapter 1. Look Good on Paper
  • Chapter 2. All Work, No Pay
  • Chapter 3. Long Game
  • Chapter 4. Traitor
  • Chapter 5. Stupid Shy
  • Chapter 6. The D List
  • Chapter 7. This Is Not a Democracy
  • Chapter 8. The Quiet Room
  • Chapter 9. Pit Stop
  • Chapter 10. That Old College Try
  • Chapter 11. Welcome Aboard
  • Chapter 12. Life Lesson
  • Chapter 13. The Ivy League Mafia
  • Chapter 14. Deep Shame, Sweet Relief
  • Chapter 15. Be Strong
  • Chapter 16. But I Just Got Here
  • Chapter 17. How to Avoid a Slush Pile
  • Chapter 18. Must Be Educated
  • Chapter 19. They Call Me Mr. Gates
  • Chapter 20. Diseased Corpses
  • Chapter 21. Clicks
  • Chapter 22. News to Me
  • Chapter 23. Drinking Games
  • Chapter 24. Point A to Point C
  • Chapter 25. Retrofit
  • Chapter 26. Midseason Replacement
  • Chapter 27. Mousetrap
  • Chapter 28. Bump
  • Chapter 29. Title Change
  • Chapter 30. Operation New Deal
  • Chapter 31. Cliff Notes
  • Chapter 32. Last Call
  • Chapter 33. Networks and Networking
  • Chapter 34. Learning Curve
  • Chapter 35. Where Do We Belong?
  • Chapter 36. Thirty Years of Magical Thinking
  • Chapter 37. Higher Learning
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

Zara (Tortured Artists, 2012) lifts a curtain on the American education system and its impact on his professional life, writing with painstaking clarity of every step he's taken to get where he is. The result of this reflection is a powerful story paired with gorgeously crafted writing. Born into a middle-class New Jersey family, Zara's story begins with his failure to finish high school in the 1990s and ends with him being a leading editor at Fast Company magazine. In between, we see Zara struggle with heroin addiction and come out the other side, feeling like we are walking alongside him on the slush-drenched streets of a New York City winter, heading to another dead-end job. Zara's memoir goes beyond the average story of personal adversity. Through it all, he matches each setback with a palpable sense of hope; readers can't help but cheer for him, for example, when, working at Show Business Weekly, he takes the brunt of his boss' angry outbursts and mood swings. It's clear that Zara is meant for bigger things. More than anything, Zara writes a necessary and inspiring story about how we are more than our educational histories.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Zara (Tortured Artists), a senior editor at Fast Company, takes an incisive, enlightening look at his trials and triumphs navigating the New York journalism world without a college degree. After completing 10th grade in Trenton, N.J., in 1986, Zara (who later obtained a GED) left high school and embarked on a series of minimum-wage jobs, picking up a heroin habit along the way. After getting clean and landing an unpaid internship at Show Business Weekly (which conveniently didn't inquire about his educational background), he secured a full-time position at the publication, later becoming a contributor to Condé Nast Traveler and Wired and a full-time reporter at Newsweek. All the while, Zara found himself just outside the industry's inner circle: "No matter how disparate and diverse my coworkers seem, they all share a collective experience--the college years and the college friends--that's completely foreign to me." Zara's tale is perfectly paced, told with powerful prose and invigorating candor. By turns hilarious and heartbreaking, this must-read memoir offers hope to anyone who worries the weight of their past stands in the way of their future. Agent: Ryan D. Harbage, Fischer-Harbage. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A memoir that demonstrates how to succeed in business without a pedigree. A journalist and senior news editor at Fast Company, Zara never graduated from an elite college. In fact, unlike most of his colleagues in journalism, he never went to college at all. A high school dropout, his only educational credential is a GED diploma. In a brisk, entertaining narrative, Zara recounts his bumpy path from a checkered school career that included many detentions, suspensions, and, finally, expulsion to an impressive position at a major media venue. Serious behavioral problems landed him in a psychiatric hospital when he was 16. In his teens, he was a punk rocker; by 22, he was a heroin addict working menial jobs to support a habit that he repeatedly tried to quit. Finally, after nine years living in Orlando and Seattle, he kicked drugs. In 2005, at the age of 35, he arrived in New York City. Searching for work, he found that the lack of a college degree loomed as a major impediment to his future no matter what job he applied for: "The educated, as a category, have a stranglehold on power and influence that is impossible to escape." Zara deliberately omitted listing his education on his resume, and even on dating apps, and he was consumed by worry that an interviewer would probe his background. One who didn't offered an unpaid internship at Show Business Weekly. Zara soon became the dying magazine's overworked editor. As he pursued his career as a writer (he got an agent and a book contract) and editor, he felt recurring anxiety at being "on the wrong side of the diploma divide," yet skepticism, too, about the value of higher education. "In a meritocracy," he writes, "there is no higher reward than to cast a smug eye on an ultra-successful career and say, I did it my way." A savvy account of an interesting life path. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.