Skip to content

Rachel Neff - author Posts

Hooray for a Successful #Muse21!

Thank you for a wonderful and successful Muse 21. Given how far away I am from Boston, it’s not normally a conference I would be able to attend. I suppose there are always glimmers of good and hope, even in these uncertain times.

I’m looking forward to all the adventures and improved writing skills that came from this conference. Thanks for signing up for my newsletter, if you haven’t already done so.

Welcome, Bloggess readers!

I’m delighted to have sponsored Jenny’s Feb. 14, 2021 Weekly Wrap Up. The coupon code she shared is valid at the University Press of Kansas’ website through March 31, 2021.

It’s a fantastic little book you could read in an afternoon, and would help in your journey if you are considering an alternate career path.

I won’t spoil the bit about “chasing chickens,” but they are both metaphorical and real! ???

Dr. Andrew R. Schrock
@aschrock

Thanks for stopping by!

Chasing Chickens Reviews

Here are a few Chasing Chickens reviews from around the web.

Rachel Neff’s story of the best-laid plans of doctoral students reminds us all that life offers many paths to success. Her resilience teaches valuable lessons as she struggles with horrendous interviews, dauntingly intense academic documents, and an employer’s seemingly random expectation that she chase literal chickens on New Year’s Eve. Neff’s experience is atypical only in its specific details; many science trainees face obstacles, and Chasing Chickens provides an important reassurance that—though they may feel otherwise on a daily basis—they are competent, they are deserving, and they are not alone.

Adam Ruben, Science careers columnist and author of Surviving Your Stupid, Stupid Decision to Go to Grad School 
https://twitter.com/aschrock/status/1262813350796292096
https://twitter.com/aschrock/status/1262813899029536768
https://twitter.com/aschrock/status/1262814897773002752
https://twitter.com/aschrock/status/1262815185175117824

Chasing Chickens

Now available.

So, you have your PhD, the academic world’s your oyster, but teaching jobs, it turns out, are as rare as pearls. Take it from someone who’s been there: your disappointment, approached from a different angle, becomes opportunity. Marshaling hard-earned wisdom tempered with a gentle wit, Rachel Neff brings her own experiences to bear on the problems facing so many frustrated exiles from the groves of academe: how to turn “This wasn’t the plan!” into “Why not?”

Fully expecting to be Doctor or Professor Neff someday, Neff instead found herself in the company of the 66 percent of doctoral graduates—more than 35,000 a year—who cannot find a full-time, tenure-track teaching job. In Chasing Chickens, she retraces the steps that took her from her moment of reckoning (aka “failure”) to a new way of seeing and grasping success. Each chapter in her pilgrim’s progress along an unlikely career path—whether revealing how she ended up chasing chickens on New Year’s Eve or explaining what happens when a PhD becomes an executive assistant (The Devil Wears Prada with a dash of Portland plaid? Yes, please!)—comes with the benefit of hindsight, lessons as practical as they are entertaining. How to face a fear of “No”; how to see the bigger picture; how to find your next career, ace an interview, and stick the landing: with every step, Neff takes the uncertainty and stress out of reinventing yourself, suggests fresh approaches along new directions, and provides the tools for finding, and making, your own way.

Finally, as if enlightenment, guidance, and the occasional moment of hilarity weren’t enough, her book offers every academic itinerant the chance to one day look back and say: “At least I didn’t have to chase chickens.”