When I came to NYU, I had many unrealistic ideas about the fashion industry. For starters, I didnât know my Zac Posenâs from my Marchesaâs; my Carine Roitfeldâs from my Anna Wintourâs. I had to google who Karl Lagerfeld was during my freshman year.
My first Fashion Week outfit was horrific. I was covering a show for Washington Square News and wore a $15 chiffon, black and cream dress I had gotten from Marshallâs. The pearl buttons on the collar fell off so I had to reattach them with a hot glue gun. I was embarrassed when I first stepped foot in the Lincoln Center. After the show, I was no longer sure that I had what it takes to succeed in the magazine industry (mainly because I didnât understand what made a chic outfit versus what made an âaverageâ one). I pictured my whole closet as the equivalent to Anne Hathawayâs infamous cerulean sweater in The Devil Wears Prada.
Up until reading Amy Odellâs Tales from the Back Row: An Outsiderâs View from Inside the Fashion Industry, I thought I was alone in this sentiment. Did I not just get fashion? Could I not succeed in the magazine business if I didnât really, truly understand the art form that is designer clothes?
As an alumna of NYU Journalism, Amy Odellâs perspective into the fashion world is the most relatable one we could ask for. She manages to call out the ridiculous nature of the fashion industry without belittling anyone, because she understands that, at the end of the day, most people want to look like the best versions of themselves (even if they wonât admit it). Amy isnât afraid to simply just say, âI donât understand everything about the fashion industry, but Iâm going to try anyways.â Tales from the Back Row isnât just hilarious â itâs real.
Amy went from buying a pair of discounted, trendy Alexander Wang sweatpants while high to wedding dress shopping drunk after she interviewed Chelsea Handler over margaritas. She knows that boyfriends, and most fashion outsiders for that matter, just donât understand how certain things you wear are considered âstylish.â Such as the time when Amyâs Alexander Wang sweatpants almost ruined her relationship when she wore them out to dinner, Iâve approached family parties in leather, calf-length midi skirts and had people wonder if I was trying to covert to the Amish lifestyle. In a totally not-cheesy way, Amy just gets it, you know?
When you read Tales from the Back Row as a college student, you learn that success just doesnât come as naturally as some fashion people make it seem. Throughout the book, you follow Amy as she gets fired from her first job to being a party reporter for New York Magazine to starting up their fashion blog, The Cut. She makes you realize that you donât just get to be the editor of Cosmpolitan.com by learning to put together a nice outfit and showing up with a resume. You have to shove recorders in celebrities faces and ask them awkward questions, and you have to wear fur sandals and pretend to be a street style star in the sake of Fashion Week. You have to do things you arenât comfortable doing, and when you see Amyâs progression as she struggles with both her shyness and her style as a fashion journalist, you feel okay knowing that that may be you, too. And maybe youâve already had those moments where you think âI might be too awkward for this industryâ or âMaybe Iâm not stylish enough to wear designer clothes.â But if thereâs anything Amy tells you in Tales from the Back Row itâs the one thing that most fashion insiders wonât: everyone feels this way at some point.
Amyâs debut book is more about being human and less about trying to fake someone youâre not in order to fit into the crowds of fedoras and Met Gala tickets. Most of all, she enjoys fashion in her own unique way â whether that be finding the most perfect Reem Acra wedding dress or having to borrow a Michael Kors dress from the fashion closet before her Vogue interview. She learned the industry one step at a time.Â
By the end of the book, Amy gets to the moment where she has that ultimate âah-haâ moment and thinks, âI canât believe this is my job after all those years of struggling.â If you too want to get to that point in your life (and get a good laugh along the way), this book is a must read.
Purchase Tales from the Back Row for $13.75 on Amazon.comÂ
Images: Lucy Helena Photography; Instagram/instamyodell