u003cbu003ecareering (verb)u003c/bu003eu003cbu003e1.u003c/bu003e u003cbu003eworking endlessly for a job you used to love and now resent entirelyu003c/bu003eu003cbu003e2.u003c/bu003e u003cbu003emoving in a way that feels out of controlu003c/bu003e*u003cbu003eThere's a fine line between on the right track and coming off the rails.u003c/bu003eImogen has always dreamed of writing for a magazine. Infinite internships later, Imogen dreams of u003ciu003eanyu003c/iu003e job. Writing her blog around double shifts at the pub is neither fulfilling her creatively nor paying the bills.Harri might just be Imogen's fairy godmother. She's moving from the glossy pages of Panache magazine to launch a fierce feminist site, The Know. And she thinks Imogen's most outrageous sexual content will help generate the clicks she needs.But neither woman is aware of the crucial thing they have in common. Harri, at the other end of her career, has also been bitten and betrayed by the industry she has given herself to. Will she wake up to the way she's being exploited before her protege realises that not everything is copy? Can either woman reconcile their love for work with the fact that work will never love them back? Or is a chaotic rebellion calling...u003cbu003eHilarious and unflinchingly honest, u003ciu003eCareeringu003c/iu003e takes a hard look at the often toxic relationship working women have with their dream jobs.u003c/bu003e'A love story about work, self-worth and modern womanhood, u003ciu003eCareeringu003c/iu003e is, quite simply, the funniest novel I've read all year.' u003cbu003eNell Frizzellu003c/bu003e'There is no writer out there who can make you laugh and cry quite like Daisy Buchanan. u003ciu003eCareeringu003c/iu003e is a compelling and thoughtful read that every woman (and man) should have on their shelves.' u003cbu003eLucy Vineu003c/bu003e'Full of brilliant characters, loveable chaos and a world of magazine nostalgia. If you've ever had a job suck your soul, even slightly, you'll love it.' u003cbu003eEmma Gannonu003c/bu003e'Blisteringly funny and painfully perceptive. Daisy has that magic gift, of capturing the nuance and detail of a very specific world in such a way that it feels universally, eternally relatable.' u003cbu003eLauren Bravou003c/bu003e