Clayton's mom got me this for my birthday this fall - Clayton heard it was good. It was.
It's a colorful, easy read with large font and quite a few pages with only a few words on them. I liked it because the format practiced what it preached - it was simple, to the point, and fun. It is broken down into several sections: Live, Love, Work, and Play, which is really all there is to life anyway, right?
It was neat to learn about the author, Karim Rashid, who is a famous product designer I of course had never heard of. He is totally full of himself (a Karimtini for happy hour, anyone?), but somehow you end up agreeing with him anyway. He wears only silver, white, and pink; hates hard edges on anything; and thinks you should have sex everyday and be great at your job, even if it's beneath you. After reading this book, I will try to wear less black, be more playful/take life less seriously, and take more pride in my work, even if it's just doing dishes at home. I'll use this too:
"Try this exercise: Write down goals for every facet of your life. Then ask yourself how your goals mesh with the real world: How am I contributing to these goals? What am I doing to achieve them?"