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[Read by Tom Taylorson] The hilarious tale of a newly full-time dad and awards-show ''plus one'' whose TV-writer wife has hit the big time. Christopher Noxon's debut novel Plus One is a comedic take on breadwinning women and caretaking men in contemporary Los Angeles. Alex Sherman-Zicklin is a mid-level marketing executive whose wife's fourteenth attempt at a television pilot is produced, ordered to series, and awarded an Emmy. Overnight, she's sucked into a mad show-business vortex and he's tasked with managing their new high-profile Hollywood lifestyle. He falls in with a posse of Plus Ones, men who are married to women whose success, income, and public recognition far surpasses their own. What will it take for him to regain the foreground in his own life? .



About the Author

Christopher Noxon

Christopher Noxon is an author, journalist and illustrator. He's the author of the novel Plus One, which "Mad Men" creator Matthew Weiner called "well-observed, honest, and laugh-out-loud funny" and Rejuvenile: Kickball, Cartoons, Cupcakes and the Reinvention of the American Grown Up, which Ira Glass, host of public radio's This American Life, called "an eye opener. " The book was featured in the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, The New York Times, CNN's "In the Money," NPR's "Talk of the Nation" and Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report. "As a journalist, he has written for The New Yorker, Details, The New York Times Magazine, Los Angeles Magazine, and Salon. He began his career in newspapers, working as an editor, enterprise reporter and arts critic for the L.A. Daily News, the Cape Cod Publishing Company and the Los Angeles Independent Newspaper Group, where he won two first-place honors from the LA Press Club for feature and news reporting. As a freelancer, he covered the Democratic National Convention for Reuters; lived as a patient with recovering addicts for a Playboy feature about troubles with drug rehab; wrote about marketing and new media for Kurt Andersen and Michael Hirschorn's Inside. com; and was the first journalist to report on actor Mel Gibson's ties to an ultraconservative Catholic splinter group in a feature for The New York Times Magazine. His illustrations have been featured on the websites The Undo List and Modern Loss and the book Unscrolled: Writers and Artists Wrestle With The Torah. Along the way, he has worked as a costumed character at Universal Studios, answered letters of complaint at L'Oreal cosmetics, and was director of communications for Michael Milken's prostate cancer charity. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, television writer/producer Jenji Kohan, and their three children.



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