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Read an Exclusive Excerpt from ‘How to Succeed in Academia’ by Ross Bullen

New this week from Humorist Books: How to Succeed in Academia (While Failing at Everything Else), by funny person, career-track professor, and podcaster Ross Bullen. It’s a book about the surprisingly terrifying quagmire that is being an academic for a living. Here’s a taste to get you to sign up to take the whole course.

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YOU GOT THIS: Student Loan Debt, High Blood Pressure, and a 1995 Toyota Tercel

Are you passionate about learning, teaching, and making less than $15,000 a year? Do you enjoy tweed blazers, crisp autumn afternoons, and stealing lunch from unattended cafeteria trays? Have you ever longed to drive, sleep, and hold your office hours in a 30-year-old car? If so, then a career in academia might be right for you!

“But wait,” you ask, “how can someone like me break into a field as prestigious and rarefied as academia?”

First of all, you need to understand that academics never ask each other questions this directly. If you want to fit in, you should try something like:

“I have a question that is more of a comment.”

Or “I have a two-part question. And one of those parts has two parts, so it’s really three questions.” You should then ask no fewer than seven questions, none of which have anything to do with what the other person was talking about.

Or “I know I was on my phone the whole time you were talking, but I’d still like to deliver a 12-minute, uninterrupted monologue about how everything you said was wrong.”

Second, you should know that this is not how books work. I’m writing these words long before you are reading them, so it’s not like this is a conversation. If you’re just learning this fact about how books work now, you’re probably not cut out for a career in academia. Sorry.

Likewise, if you’re the kind of person who genuinely enjoys a good conversation, you’re probably not going to enjoy working in academia either, unless you think asking “so what are you working on these day” and then ignoring everything the other person says counts as a good conversation. If that sounds like a deal breaker for you, close this book right now, place it back on your bookshelf, and immediately purchase several more copies of this very same book to see if one of them works out better for you.

“But wait,” you ask, “who are you to tell me what career I should choose?”

Good question. Although most books, including this one, feature an author biography that answers all of that, we’ve already established that books are scary and new for you, so I’ll help you out with this. My name is Ross Bullen. I’ve worked at a beer bottle factory, a small-town Renaissance Faire, and a McDonald’s across the street from a maximum-security prison. I’ve also spent the past two decades teaching off – sometimes way off ­– the tenure-track. And I can attest from personal experience that getting shafted by the Ivory Tower hurts just as badly as it sounds.

For those who don’t know, “tenure-track” means a job where you are expected to receive tenure, i.e., a job for life, unless of course you work in Florida, West Virginia, or [INSERT NAME OF LATEST REPUBLICAN-RULED NIGHTMARE STATE HERE]. The typical tenure-track career path is Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, Full Professor – at which point you can either become a Dean, a Vice-President, or Jordan Peterson (disclaimer: none of these options are healthy or endorsed by the author). The problem is that the number of tenure- track jobs has been declining steadily for the past 40 years.[2] These days, most professors work jobs with weird titles like LTA (Limited-Term Appointment), VAP (Visiting Assistant Professor), or RACCOONS (Rejected At Community Colleges Or Other Nice Schools). But the majority of college teachers are what’s known as “adjunct professors.”

The original idea behind adjunct professors makes sense: sometimes schools needed an outside expert to teach a class in a niche area, and even though this expert usually had another job, the school still paid them a stipend for their trouble. So far, so good. The problem is that once colleges realized they could hire professors on the cheap, they decided they should always do this. And although a handful of new tenure-track professors get hired each year, most people teaching at colleges in the U.S. (and elsewhere) do so as adjuncts. The typical adjunct professor career path is Adjunct, Adjunct, Unemployed, Subway Sandwich Artistä, Adjunct. Technically, tenure-track professors get paid for research and service in addition to teaching, and adjuncts don’t, but that just means that adjuncts wind up doing research and service for free (how else are you supposed to prove that you’re worthy of a tenure-track job, should one ever become available?).

If all of this sounds bad, that’s because it is. But this book is not called How to Avoid Working in Academia (although if anybody has a book like that, please, for the love of God, send it to me ASAP). It’s How to Succeed in Academia, and that’s just what I’m going to teach you to do. This book will guide you through every step of your academic journey, whether it’s finishing your dissertation on time (or at least before the heat death of the universe), applying for an academic job (by summoning the ancient Mesopotamian demon Pazuzu), or overcoming imposter syndrome (even if you’re a family of raccoons living in a Fjällräven Parka).

So, grab a seat, a nice mug of warm milk, and settle in for some good old fashioned book reading (at least until your shift at Subway starts). You’re an academic now!

How to Succeed in Academia (While Failing at Everything Else) is available now from Humorist Books.

6 Important Writerly Questions with Ross Bullen

Attention students, administrators, and adjunct professors: Ross Bullen, author of How to Succeed in Academia (While Failing at Everything Else), is speaking. It’s the go-to guide for career academics (and a whole lot more weird and dark places) from someone who has been in the trenches of faculty life and seen it all and survived, albeit barely. We conducted this interview with Ross in a format to which he’s accustomed: homework.


1.Who are you? What are you doing here?

I appreciate that you are starting this interview with a question that you could ask to either a writer or an old man you caught shoplifting cat food from a bodega. Fortunately, I aspire to be both of those people. My name is Ross Bullen, I’m an English professor at an art school, and I live in Toronto.

2. Since “where do you get your ideas?” is a terrible question, what made you want to write this book?

I’ve been writing satire about academia for a while now. It started with angry Facebook posts before gravitating to the place where unhinged rants truly became an art form: Twitter. Eventually, I started submitting stuff to McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. After a normal-ish number of rejections (7?), I had a piece accepted. More rejections followed, of course, but once I figured out that academic satire was my niche, I had a lot more success. I noticed that a number of McSweeney’s writers were able to turn their short humor pieces into books, so I took a class on writing a book proposal with the fabulous and hilarious Caitlin Kunkel, and about a year later my proposal was accepted by Humorist Books!

3. How did you KEEP writing this book?

Cocaine, of course! Or at least it’s middle-aged equivalent: coffee and guilt.

4. Who is this book for, anyway?

Honestly, anyone who has ever been a part of academia, as a student, a teacher, a parent, or an administrator, would probably find something to love (or hate) about this book. But I’d say the audience who are most likely to enjoy the book are the extremely online set of academics sometimes known as “Academic Twitter.”

5. Any darlings you had to kill?

John Hodgman once made a list of 700 fake hobo names. I wanted to do the same thing, but for adjunct professors who sailed with the Pilgrims on the Mayflower. I could only come up with 99, so I guess that’s 601 darling adjunct professors that I had to kill.

6. What are you working on now?

I’m an English professor, so I’m always working on academic research and writing projects. On the more creative side of things, I’m starting research for a non-fiction book I want to write about a professor who taught at the same art school as me in the 1970s. He taught some really weird classes that involved things like LSD therapy, eating tiger meat, and abandoning his students on an island in the Bahamas. Remember when school used to be exciting? And kind of traumatizing? Anyway, I’ve been talking to a bunch of his former students and colleagues, and it’s been a lot of fun.

How to Succeed in Academia (While Failing at Everything Else) is available now from Humorist Books.

Check Out Humorist Books editor Brian Boone on “The Official Dream Dinner Party Podcast”

One of our all-time favorite and bestselling books here is Gary M. Almeter’s The Official Dream Dinner Party Handbook. It’s in-depth and entertaining exploration of that old party game and conversation starter, “What people, living or dead, would you most want to have dinner with.” (It makes a great gift!) And it’s also a podcast, The Official Dream Dinner Party Podcast.

On the latest episode, Almeter and cohost Ross Bullen welcome Humorist Books editor (and Humorist Books Blog writer) Brian Boone to the show. They talk basketball, comedy writing, literature, couscous, and so much more in what was just a lovely conversation and a great time.

Listen on Apple Podcasts

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