Po Bronson's What Should I Do With My Life? speaks to the almost universal dream of finding one's true, life-affirming passion. An inspirational book that has the power to change lives- and happens to have a really bad title. Make no mistake- this is not a self help book, in the conventional sense.
This book does not offer 12 steps for finding your one true way. It doesn't purport to have empirical answers to all of the existential dilemmas in your life. You won't find any easy-bake recipes guaranteeing self-actualization or happiness- Po Bronson pulls no punches and makes no pretense in that regard.
Instead, this is a collection of vignettes about average normal people from all sorts of walks of life in search of a happier, more meaningful existence. The tough-love moral of all of the stories in this book is that the road to a passion-filled life is not clearly defined, and more often than not it isn't a road at all - more like a faintly defined path obscured on all sides by tall weeds.
Since the author does not purport to answer the question "What Should I Do With My Life?" definitively, he does the next best thing - he offers up dozens of stories about how other people came to answer this question for themselves, in the hope that other peoples experiences might be instructive to the rest of us.
This is an incredibly honest, unvarnished, empathetic book, highly recommended for anyone that has a nagging suspicion that there might be something more meaningful to life than the endless pursuit of those perennial touchstones of the American Dream- class, status, and prestige, along with the shiny material baubles (big houses, German cars, trophy spouses, insert your aspirational obscur objet du désir here) that accompany them. Or, said another way. in the lyrics of 70's honky-tonk musician Tom T Hall: "faster horses, younger women, older whiskey, and more money" (Couldn't have said it better myself).
The first time I came across this book I made the age-old mistake of judging it by it's cover- at first glance the title sounded... shallow, petulant, whiny even. At the time I happened to be a reliable authority on pretty much everything there was to know about everything. One of the recurring ironies of my life is that the older I get, the more I realize I don't know. Some years later I found myself buying my own copy. It didn't take me very long to realize that the Author doesn't have any "magic beans" for sale.
About 1/2 way through this book I realized it actually has the perfect title. In fact I can't imagine calling it anything else. What Should I Do With My Life? succinctly sums up the essence of what this book is all about - The frustrating, hair-raising fact of the matter is that there is no definitive "right" answer to the question... This book provides a noble public service- it's single raison d'etre is to help people of all ages and from all sorts of life experiences come closer to answering that most universal question on their own terms, using the best possible method- sharing the stories of others who have asked the same question, listened carefully for their own answers, and found the courage to take the leap of faith that so very often is mandatory on the faint and weedy path towards a happier life.