<![CDATA[Jezebel: harpercollins]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/jezebel.com.png <![CDATA[Jezebel: harpercollins]]> http://jezebel.com/tag/harpercollins http://jezebel.com/tag/harpercollins <![CDATA[Madeleine Albright's Jewelry Box Diplomacy]]> Madeleine Albright is celebrated for many things, but fashion is not usually one of them. Albright, however, has been a trailblazer in one particular niche: Pins. Her new book, Read My Pins offers a detailed look at fashionable diplomacy.



The book documents the same pins featured in an exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design. The project is called Read My Pins: Stories from a Diplomat's Jewelry Box. Albright's extensive collection features around 300 pins, and while that does include a few expensive pieces, most of them are cheap, fun costume jewelry. The title is a play on George H. W. Bush's controversial phrase, "read my lips."


Albright tells NPR about the history of her relationship with the faux-jewels, which began when an Iraqi newspaper ran a poem about the diplomat, which contained the lines "Albright, Albright, all right, all right, you are the worst in this night" and called her an "unparalleled serpent." She recalls,

This all started when I was an ambassador at the United Nations, Sadam Hussein called me a serpent, and I had this one antique snake pin, and so when we were dealing with Iraq, I wore a snake pin. And I thought, 'well, this is fun.' Then I went out, and bought a bunch of costume jewelry to signal what my mood of the day was.

The serpent pin that sparked a trend in fashionable politics is featured on the back cover of her book.


Albright has a lot of critter pins, and her collection seems to feature a disproportionate number of insect pins. She reveals that some bug pins were symbolic "protest pins." She wore a huge bertle pin after the Russians were caught taping the State Department, to send a non-so-subtle message about her anger. When she wanted to "do a little stinging or deliver a tough message," she chose a wasp pin. Butterfly pins meant the opposite, as did her hot air balloons.


Albright also has several bird pins, some of which were gifts, some of which she gave as gifts. Apparently, choosing the right present for a foreign diplomat is a tricky thing, which requires a good deal of care. She says she tried to find "mementos that reflected the United States," like this gold eagle. She also wore an eagle pin to talk with Craig Ferguson, to reflect the fact that they are both naturalized Americans, "which makes us very patriotic."

One of Albright's most notable winged-pins is a simple gold dove, given to her by Leah Rabin, wife of slain Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. She wore the "peace dove" to visit the victims of genocide in Rwanda.


Albright says this pin shows the glass ceiling "in its ideal condition: shattered." She says was "so proud" to become the first woman to serve as Secretary of State and "thrilled" when Hillary Clinton took on the same position. However, unlike some politicians, she recognizes that the glass ceiling has yet to be shattered. She tells Forbes that sometimes she finds the media's obsession with her outfits frustrating:

It can be occasionally maddening. As Secretary of State, you are actually doing very important business and delivering tough messages. But no matter what, people were concerned with what I was wearing, the level of my hemline. It can be kind of demeaning, depending on the situation.



But Albright does have some great advice on how to wear pins. She says the location is very, very important. First of all, one must, at all costs, avoid the dreaded "Hooters effect." She tells Newsweek that she has begun to wear her pins higher and higher as the years go on. She also touches on the dangers of bear hugs:

There are some people who wear them on the right side, some on the left side. Some wear them on their lapels. I keep wearing my pins higher and higher. It just goes to show what happens in diplomacy. I was visiting South Korea. There were always good relations and nice dialogue. But there was a Korean foreign minister who thought he was not on the record and was having some fun, and said that he loves it when Secretary Albright would come to Seoul because we had a nice relationship and we were about the same age, but he was like an old man and I was so vigorous and besides when he gave me a hug I had very firm breasts. All of a sudden there was this outcry over this and there were questions about whether would he have to resign for saying that. So they asked me what I thought, and I said, "Well, I've got to have somewhere to put those pins." So that helped, but the next time we saw each other, we shook hands at a very respectful distance, no more hugging.



Another cool feature of the book is the "Pindex" at the back, which catalogs her numerous pins with page numbers and dates. But now that all of her pins are being displayed behind glass, Albright has nothing to wear. Fortunately, people have been stopping her on the street to give her "pity pins." "Yesterday, for instance, I was walking around and somebody gave me a pin that said, ‘Chicks Rock,'" she says, in an interview with the Daily Beast. "So, I think that's kind of fun."


Albright's Pin Diplomacy [Daily Beast]
Big Pin [New Yorker]
Madeleine Albright's Jewelry-Box Diplomacy [NPR]
10 Minutes With Madeleine Albright [Forbes]
Albright's Legacy: Read My Pins [WWD]
Read My Pins: Stories From A Diplomat's Jewel Box [Harper Collins]
Madeleine Albright On The Pins She Wore [Newsweek]

Related: Madeleine Albright On Wingnuts, Lapel-Wear & Bill Clinton's Love Of Women

All Images Via Harper Collins

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<![CDATA[The Book Of Love]]> If a man like Mystery can make a living off of telling nerdy men how to score with chicks, why can't a 9-year-old boy write a dating book? Alec Greven recently published a book with HarperCollins called How to Talk to Girls that is full of plain-spoken, common sense tips to help boys with their dating woes. Some of the pointers are simple: "comb your hair and don't wear sweats" and keep approaches easy with a friendly "hi." Greven also warns against pretty girls — easily spotted with their "big earrings, fancy dresses and all the jewelry" — because they can be "cold-hearted." [NY Post]

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<![CDATA["Star" and "designer" Lauren Conrad can now...]]> "Star" and "designer" Lauren Conrad can now add another dubious distinction to her list: "writer." According to People L.C. has just signed a three book deal with HarperCollins to write a series of young adult novels. "The books — the first of which is scheduled to hit shelves in the summer of 2009 — will be loosely inspired by Conrad's own experience going from an ordinary teen to a reality TV star," People reports. Ok, L.C. is obviously not a stupid person, but we'll eat our respective hats if she's writing these books alone. If any publishing moles can tell us who's ghostwriting these soon-to-be literary classics, drop us a line. [People]

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<![CDATA[Judith Regan Vs. Rupert Murdoch: Who Has The Bigger Cock?]]> Former HarperCollins imprint editor and assistant taunting "crazy bitch" Judith Regan finally filed a $100 million defamation lawsuit against NewsCorp, HarperCollins' parent company yesterday, almost a year after she was fired for planning a certain O.J. Simpson confessional and also for alleged anti-Semitic remarks. Regan, who reportedly used to scream, "I have the biggest cock in the building" is brandishing her figurative phallus with this suit. She accuses Rupert Murdoch's NewsCorp of launching a smear campaign against her because of her affair with former Giuliani police commissioner Bernie Kerik and alleges that a "senior News Corp. executive told her he believed she had information about Kerik that could hurt Giuliani's campaign and she should lie to federal investigators."



Regan also says that HarperCollins encouraged "a culture of gossip, back-stabbing, negative leaks and hostility." This from a woman who used to call her assistants cunts who only had a job because of her hard work. Regan insists that she was made to take the fall for the bad publicity sullying the O.J. imaginary confession, If I Did It and her lawsuit also alleges "that Rupert Murdoch personally approved the Simpson project and suggested that she pay $1 million for the deal." Say what you will about Regan, but everything she publishes, even her lawsuits, are juicy!

Judith Regan Sues Murdoch Empire [The Smoking Gun]
Ousted publisher Regan sues former employer for $100M [USA Today]
In Complaint, a Portrait of a Company Marked by Rivalry [New York Times]
The Judith Regan Story[New York Magazine]

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