Rules for Aging: A Wry and Witty Guide to Life | 
enlarge | Author: Roger Rosenblatt Publisher: Harvest Books Category: Book
List Price: $12.00 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $11.99 (100%)
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Rating: 33 reviews Sales Rank: 92020
Media: Paperback Pages: 168 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.5
ISBN: 0156013606 Dewey Decimal Number: 818.5402 EAN: 9780156013604 ASIN: 0156013606
Publication Date: November 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Great condition for a used book! Minimal wear. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Shipped to over one million happy customers. Your purchase benefits world literacy!
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Amazon.com Review What? A how-to-make-your-life-better-book with more than the ubiquitous seven ways of doing so? In Rules for Aging: Resist Normal Impulses, Live Longer, Attain Perfection, acclaimed essayist and NewsHour with Jim Lehrer regular contributor Roger Rosenblatt boldly offers up a whopping 56 rules for wisely navigating life into your golden years. Rosenblatt describes the short book (only 140 pages), which began with a column he wrote for Modern Maturity, as a "little guide intended for people who wish to age successfully, or at all." He adds that "growing older is as much an art as it is a science, and it requires fewer things to do than not to do." Ranging from the fatalistic (rule 1: "It doesn't matter") to the highly practical (rule 26: "Never go to a cocktail party and, in any case, do not stay more than 20 minutes"), rule 2 best illustrates the tone for much of what follows ("Nobody is thinking about you"): Yes, I know, you are certain that your friends are becoming your enemies; that your grocer, garbage man, clergyman, sister-in-law, and your dog are all of the opinion that you have put on weight, that you have lost your touch, that you have lost your mind; furthermore, you are convinced that everyone spends two-thirds of every day commenting on your disintegration, denigrating your work, plotting your assassination. I promise you: Nobody is thinking about you. They are thinking about themselves--just like you. Other notables include "Let bad enough alone" (rule 3), "Stay clear of anyone--other than a clergyman--who refers to God more than once in an hour" (rule 8), "Do not attempt to improve anyone, especially when you know it will help" (rule 29), "The unexamined life lasts longer" (rule 40), "Change no more than one-eighth of your life at a time" (rule 48), and "The game is played away from the ball" (rule 55). Nowhere will you find talk of antioxidants or exercise or anything resembling a detox program. Rosenblatt is no health nut, and there is already plenty of material available on that. What you will encounter instead is a gifted writer clearly enjoying his craft, making this slim volume a welcome poke at and departure from the more predictable antiaging fare. --Patrick Jennings
Product Description
Acclaimed and beloved prize-winning essayist Roger Rosenblatt has commented on most of the trends and events of our time. His columns in Time magazine and his commentaries on PBS's News Hour with Jim Lehrer have made him a household word and a trusted friend of millions. With a wry sense of humor and inimitable wit, Rosenblatt offers here guidelines for aging that are both easy to understand and, more importantly, easy to implement.
More and more in the news today, we are hearing about phenomenal advances in the "fight against aging." But what Rosenblatt suggests to combat age is far more valuable than any scientific breakthrough-he breaks down the hardest part of aging, the mental anguish of growing older with fifty-four gems of funny, brilliant, wise, indispensable advice.
A book to savor, a book to keep, and a book for all ages.
This little guide is intended for people who wish to age successfully, or at all. . . . One may think of this work as a how-to book, akin to many health guides published these days, whose purpose is to prolong our lives and make them richer. That is the aim of my book, too. -from the Introduction
And this is just the start of Roger Rosenblatt's charming and thought-provoking guide to surviving the episodes that shamelessly shave years off of our lives. With a wry sense of humor and peerless wit, Rules for Aging provides guidance that is, hands down, the most practical, pleasurable and, most importantly, painless advice you'll ever receive. As Rosenblatt writes, "When I urge you to refrain from a certain thought or course of action, I do not mean to suggest that you are in any way wrong if you do the opposite. I mean only to say that you will suffer."
Rule #1: It doesn't matter Whatever you think matters-doesn't. Follow this rule, and it will add decades to your life. It does not matter if you are late, or early; if you are here, or if you are there; if you said it, or did not say it; if you were clever, or if you were stupid; if you are having a bad hair day, or a no hair day; if your boss looks at you cockeyed; if your girlfriend or boyfriend looks at you cockeyed; if you don't get that promotion, or prize, or house, or if you do. It doesn't matter.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 28 more reviews...
Reality Check September 6, 2008 ~~Hummingbirder~~ (Pataskala, OH) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
One's perception of the title is that it's for old people. It isn't. It's for people who are breathing. This is a great read when you're feeling overwhelmed. Starting with Rule Number One: It Doesn't Matter, Rosenblatt puts you in your place with a smile on your face. I bring this in to work from time to time and read a rule aloud to my co-workers. It really brightens the day. It's glib, so don't take the book too seriously, but have a good time with it!
Delightful short book. June 1, 2008 T. Ervin (tucson az usa) I should read it every winter, or oftener. Rosenblatt is so much fun. Good wisdom here.
Poorly titled, but charming, funny and wise February 1, 2008 John Christiansen (Windsor Heights, IA) I glanced inside this book of very short essays without expecting to give it a second thought and was immediately charmed by the humor. As I laughed out loud, I had to concede the little pebble of plain truth the author provided-- not just in that piece, but in each one. I don't usually go for gifty pop wisdom books, but I really enjoyed this. It's insightful, funny and plainspoken. Certainly there was no padding of the text to make it seem a more substantial book than it is-- possibly half of the small pages are less than half full. At 29, I was a little put off by the "aging" focus-- a little embarrassed to be reading something that on the surface appears to focus on middle age. It doesn't read like it; there's no mention of grandchildren or retirement or anything demographically specific. It seems as though the publisher's marketing department fabricated the title to focus on a niche cohort-- unfortunately so, since I can't think of a single "grown-up" (or aspiring grown-up) who has nothing to learn from this one.
Entertaining and Witty November 18, 2007 K. Scott Proctor (Wilmington, DE USA) "Rules for Aging" is an entertaining and witty compilation of "words of advice" for aging successfully. A short and direct book full of humorous anecdotes, this is an entertaining, engaging and worthwhile read. For a lighthearted and intelligent look at life, buy this book.
Some good tips October 20, 2007 A. K. Kaw I read this book and ordered two of them for my friends. I wish I had known that what I thought was my own common wisdom was true twenty years ago. It is quite a funny book that makes a lot of points quite bluntly.
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