Covering many of the topics to be found in other Self Help and Happiness books, this one has a distinctly autobiographical flavour, as the author talks about how each theme relates to his own life. For example, the chapter on sleep included a digression on his (childhood) problems with bed wetting. The chapter on Education talked about his attempts to advise his daughter on what subjects to choose for her GCSEs, after having regaled us with the history of his attempts to get his first book published.
That kind of content would be interesting in an autobiography, but I wasn’t looking for an autobiography when I picked this book up. After a while, I just found the chatty digressions and personal anecdotes starting to get in the way of the actual content and core message of the book. Readers who like chatty conversational books will undoubtedly like this book, because that is such a significant element of the text. Readers who are just interested in the eight core issues of self-help, which the author identifies as the heart of this book, may well find the book’s meandering style a bit grating.
I also felt less confident in some of the assertions in the book. Apparently, ‘Reading a self help book with a fixed mindset is like hoping to win the lottery without buying a ticket’ (27%). Really? There are degrees of fixed-mindedness and even those who do not think they can improve personally, or intrinsically, can still implement extrinsic measures in their lives, like changing their diet and/or sleep patterns. The book was just a little too black and white opinionated at times, forgetting that reality can be a lot grayer...
Another feature of the book which may be of relevance for some readers is the swearing. Whether it be the ‘lucky f**kers’ in chapter 3, or the ‘hippy s**t’ in chapter 4 (etc etc), readers who object to unnecessary swearing will not appreciate this book. Of course, readers who see swearing as evidence of the author’s ‘authenticity’ and who also see some relevant link between authenticity and the value of a book's content, will undoubtedly take an opposite view.
Overall this seems to me to be the kind of book that readers will either like or dislike, depending largely upon their preferences for writing style.