
For someone who should be scraping the bottom of the publishing barrel, author and news-article-re-poster James Frey certainly seems to have crawled his way to the top. Over Nan Talese’s body.
Not only has his “switch” to fiction – one rumor we continue to hear from publishing insiders is James always imagined himself a novelist, but publishers knew they could better market a memoir, so he, stupidly, made the jump – been nicely swept under the rug (with A Million Little Pieces continuing to move copies), but his new effort, Bright Shiny Morning, on bookshelves May 13, is being feted with a May 8 Sotheby’s party with a limited edition of the novel, in collaboration with photogs Terry Richardson and Richard Prince, to be released. He’ll then head off to Anaheim to speak at the American Library Association convention.
Having ditched Random House imprint Double Day, Frey is now at HarperColilns. Which might explain why today’s Page Six carries the flattering news; HarperCollins, like the Post, is owned by News Corp. That, and former MSNBC programming whiz Davidson Goldin, who is counseling Frey on all things media relations, appears to be damn good at his job.

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