
How to Live, Or, A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer
How do you avoid being drawn into pointless arguments with a partner or colleague? / How do you deal with fanatics? / How do you balance the need to feel safe against the need to feel free? / What is the wisest way to behave if you are mugged, or assaulted, or held to ransom? / How do you reassure a gullible friend who thinks a witch has cast a spell on him? / How do you get over the death of someone you love? / How do you make the most of every moment, so that life does not slip away from you unnoticed and unappreciated? Questions like this u some small, others vast and barely answerable u arise in most people's lives (apart from the witch). All are variations on one great question: how do you live well?How do you do the right thing whatever life throws at you? We all face the 'how to live' question in our own way, but the idea that looking inwards, examining one's own life, can create a mirror for others, was not always obvious.
Reviews

Ri Liu@riblah
I'm a fan of Bakewell's writing, but her book on existentialists gripped me a bit more than this one. I did quite enjoy the depiction of quibbling between the editors of Montaigne's essays, including the wholly predictable sexist sidelining of his female adopted-heir/publisher, despite hers being likely the most canonical of the editions.

Rory O'K@ror

Crystal L@umcrystal

Rushali Parikh@rushali

Rory O'K@ror

Irene Alegre@irenealegre

Neta Steingart@neta_shin

Kait Long@kaitlong

Sander@sander

Ze@ze