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Hardcover Where There's a Will: Thoughts on the Good Life Book

ISBN: 0670034096

ISBN13: 9780670034093

Where There's a Will: Thoughts on the Good Life

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

John Mortimer is best known for his stories about the lovable and disheveled barrister Horace Rumpole, the "great defender of muddled and sinful humanity." But he is also an accomplished memoirist,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Elegant, wise, and humorously self-effacing

I should first confess my bias--I have often been tickled and sometimes awed by Mortimer's way with English prose for 20 years. So, in picking up this book I had the high expectations one might have before meeting an old friend or beloved teacher. No disappointment. Even if some of these essays are slightly less effervescent than others, all are at least wonderful, and several are both brilliant and touching. Mortimer has given us a collection of short essays, conversational and often wryly funny, which he intends as a kind of spiritual bequeathal to his family and other heirs. The chapters range across a broad range of subjects, some perhaps outwardly frivolous, like the cooking of eggs. But in the main, Mortimer touches on matters of great substance--the nature of beauty, how to be happy, surprising ways in which our world has managed to be unjust, places and times for sex, how to dine sociably, the love of children, faith and reason, the terrors of the writer facing blank paper, and many more. I found these essays to be wise and absolutely delicious. I suspect that readers who have enjoyed Rumpole, or Mortimer's other biographical essays like Summer of a Doormouse, or Clinging to the Wreckage, will be quite pleased with these sketches. Mortimer may, sadly, be nearing the end of his life, but at present he seems to be on a literary tear. I, for one, wish him many more prolific years.

Rational Thoughts

Sir John Mortimer is an extremely literate and honestly open-minded person who writes with a flowing exquisiteness of the English language. This small book of his thoughts on a good life is a reminiscence of the life he has led and is still leading. He mentions a lot of classical literary authors and their characters that would further enrich a person's knowledge. Also, the various types of people he met working at the Old Bailey has surely enhanced his art of observing and putting their perspectives onto paper. Together with wild imaginations of his, no wonder his many writings are keenly absorbed by the public. The last ten chapters are my favorite but in each I find something to laugh out loud about. This is his own story and the way he tells it is invigorating. In not so many words in each section, he still succeeds in relaying his message that is predominantly deliberate.

It's best to go out laughing

Not all of this is to my taste, but Mortimer is a wonderful comic writer with a really supreme sense of the foibles of human life and character. He takes nothing too seriously and certainly not himself and in these short chapters, thirty- two on all on various aspects of his life with the law, his family, he entertains and provides us perhaps one basic lesson: i.e. If one has to go through it it's best to go through it with a smile. And if one has to go out, and one does have to go out, it's best to do it in laughter.

Delightfully Full of Humor and Wisdom

This book starts out: "All advice is perfectly useless. Particularly advice on the subject of life. You may, at a pinch, take your schoolteacher's word on the subject of equilateral triangles, or the Latin word for 'parsley'; but remember that life's a closed book to schoolteachers." That pretty much sets the tone for the book. Sir Mortimer has been an actor, a barrister, librettist, screenwriter and playwright. Best known as the author of Rumpole of the Bailey, he is now 81 and passing along just a bit of the wisdom that he has learned through the ages. These 32 short chapters discourse on history, poetry, education, democracy, smoking -- just about anything that enters his mind. And his mind thinks on very diverse subjects. It's not politically correct, at 81, he doesn't have to be. Profound though it is, if you can stop laughing enough. Delightful book.

excellent essays

Octogenarian John "Horace Rumpole" Mortimer provides a series of intelligent humorous essays and soliloquies on living life to the fullest especially the young, which the author insists has no age barrier but instead is a state of mind (and body - though outdoor sex at 81 or even 54 sounds vulgar to voyeurs not the players). The chapters are brief and to the point, as Mr. Mortimer provides his readers with his last will and testament of sorts that uses literary references to emphasize his philosophy of enjoying yourself. He has written these thirty-two essays on a myriad of topics that range the gamut of modern stifling not living. Speak up rather than echoing silence as Mr. Mortimer employs amusing word play, puns, and other uplifting humor to provide sound advice filled with fury to the young to live life for you rather than become someone else's tale signifying nothing. Harriet Klausner
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