About the Book
Source: Wikia. Pages: 57. Chapters: 5G, A Night to Remember, Babylon, Blowing Smoke, Chinese Wall, Christmas Comes But Once a Year, Flight 1, For Those Who Think Young, Guy Walks Into an Advertising Agency, Hands and Knees, Indian Summer, Ladies Room, Long Weekend, Love Among the Ruins, Maidenform, Marriage of Figaro, Meditations in an Emergency, My Old Kentucky Home, New Amsterdam, Nixon vs. Kennedy, Out of Town, Public Relations, Red in the Face, Seven Twenty Three, Shoot, Shut the Door. Have a Seat, Six Month Leave, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, Souvenir, The Arrangements, The Beautiful Girls, The Benefactor, The Chrysanthemum and the Sword, The Color Blue, The Fog, The Gold Violin, The Good News, The Grown-Ups, The Gypsy and the Hobo, The Hobo Code, The Inheritance, The Jet Set, The Mountain King, The New Girl, The Rejected, The Suitcase, The Summer Man, The Wheel, Three Sundays, Tomorrowland, Waldorf Stories, Wee Small Hours. Excerpt: After Don wins an award, his photo is featured in Advertising Age. Don must deal with the fallout as the photo brings back a past he isn't ready to confront. Ken gets a short story published in The Atlantic Monthly, inciting envy amongst his colleagues and driving Pete to make an unorthodox request of his wife. Peggy overhears a startling conversation in the office and shares the secret with Joan. The episode started off with Betty and Don, home from a ceremony, in which Don has won an award, the "Newkie." The following morning, Don wakes up hung over, and arrives late to the office. When he arrives Peggy tells him that Pete had given up waiting on him. Later, Peggy intercoms into Don's office that he has a phone call from Bix Beederbecka, a name that Midge has used. Peggy accidentally overhears part of his conversation, after which Don leaves for "Lunch," which Peggy knows is not true. The office was buzzing because Ken wrote a short story, "Tapping a Maple on a Cold Vermont Morning," that was published in the acclaimed Atlantic M...