Gyles Brandreth may be an acquired taste, but not for me. I like his love of words and the pleasure he takes in using them. Yes, he can be prolix, but the real virtue of this book is that it displays him at his most enthusiastically encouraging. In it, his intention is to promote the lifelong pleasure of learning poetry - well, learning anything - by heart.
He is adamant that as well as providing the learner with a bank of recallable pleasure, the activity required of the brain in the memorising of poetry is one that increases both wellbeing and physical - including cerebral - health. And he is excellent at explaining how poetry works to even the most frightened or prejudiced former school pupil, which pretty much means everyone.
I specially liked the section he devotes to some of the ways we can commit something to memory, the most indiosyncratic of which, among many, was his teenage technique of learning a sonnet as he travelled between the 14 underground stations between Waterloo and Queen's Park: it was a line between every stop. Whatever works for you!
And the book is also an anthology of well known as well as less celebrated - even unknown - poems, selected as he considers them ones which are accessible to all and which he esteems as enjoyably worthwhile spending time with. This does not mean the collection is trivial: there's plenty of Shakespeare, for example. But his range extends from 'There was an old man of Peru...' to 'Of man's first diobedience...' with plenty of variety - old, modern, contemporary - in between. For example, you can tackle Edward Lear (How pleasant to know Mr Lear) and Flanders and Swann (The Hippopotamus Song), or Oscar Wilde (The seasons send their ruin as they go) and John Gillespie Magee Jr (Oh, I have slipped the surly bonds of earth) and Elma Mitchell (Women reminded him of lilies and roses). There are short poems and long ones, funny ones and serious ones - in all a marvellously varied collection.
Well worth taking the man's advice. Get learning now. As he says, anyone can do two lines a day!