"The vices help make virtues just as poisons help make medicines. Diluted and blended correctly, they are quite useful against the evils of life." Francois de La Rochefocauld
This is the philosophies of this funny, interesting book, which only promotes vices in a tongue-in-cheek way.
Self-righteousness was never considered one of the seven deadly sins, but it's the only character vice not covered in this book. Instead there are fascinating little nips from books by authors like Seneca, Ben Jonson, Boccaccio, Benjamin Franklin ("On Selecting A Mistress"), Doyle, Austen, Horace...I've never felt so literate than after finishing this!
SOAPBOX: I've come to the opinion that instead of weak, watery, modern vices (people who have had so much dope, sex, alcohol, fights etc., that they can't actually FEEL pleasure or relief anymore, yet are damned to spend each day doing the same old things out of habit), that the Old School, Back-In-The-Day type of person had vigorous, zesty vices. You young whippersnappers don't know how to do vice anymore! (*Puts soapbox away*)
Wowza! Some of the entries in here are a little rowdy for me, especially in the "Lust" section, but there's good fun to be had here. Since it's a bunch of small entries, it's easy to pick up and put down during the day.