cover image Mergers and Acquisitions: Or, Everything I Know About Love I Learned on the Wedding Pages

Mergers and Acquisitions: Or, Everything I Know About Love I Learned on the Wedding Pages

Cate Doty. Putnam, $27 (368p) ISBN 978-0-593-19044-9

Journalist Doty’s boisterous debut combines memoir with a behind-the-scenes look at the New York Times style section and a survey of modern marriage trends. Soon after graduating from UNC in 2002, Doty, who “loved nothing more... than playing dress-up in my mom’s homemade wedding dress” as a girl, landed a job writing wedding announcements for the Times. Doty tracks the evolution of the paper’s society pages from the appearance of the first wedding announcement in 1851 to the first inclusion of a same-sex couple in 2012, shares details of the selection process (announcements typically chosen for publication are “chronicle[s] of power”), and describes the awkwardness of fact-checking the backgrounds of marquee couples whose announcements were set to appear “above the fold.” Throughout, she interweaves biographical details about her childhood in the South, reflects on how the institution of marriage has changed as a result of women’s empowerment, and offers an intimate look at the ups and downs of her love life in New York City and her own marriage (which was announced by the Times in 2010). Laced with frank reflection and entertaining anecdotes, this is a winning portrait of love and ambition in the 21st century. (May)