November 21, 2009
50 Ways to Leave Your 40s: Living It Up in Life’s Second Half
Product DescriptionIf you’re approaching that huge milepost with less than your usual birthday enthusiasm, open this book to discover all the ways in which turning fifty might just be the best thing yet. The authors share a wide range of ideas for making this major life transition a time of opportunity, growth, and celebration. As Sheila Key writes in the introduction: “What Peg and I hope you’ll hear among these pages is the irrepressible rustling of joy — joy enough to make you bust out laughing, sure, and the kind that comes from improving your mental outlook and physical habits, even just a little. But also the simple joy of having lived this long, of being able to look back over five full decades and forward to who-k. . . More >>
50 Ways to Leave Your 40s: Living It Up in Life’s Second Half
Filed under gift idea by .














Comments on 50 Ways to Leave Your 40s: Living It Up in Life’s Second Half »
Bought this for my mom’s 50th birthday. I couldn’t decide between a gag or sincere one, then I found this book. It was perfect: funny, serious, happy and comforting. She loved it, started reading right away!
Rating: 5 / 5
This was the year that I left my 40’s behind and entered what I once considered to be the least desirable of all of life’s decades, my 50’s: Too young for Medicare and too old for women to care. But then I read this delightful little book and realized that my spirits need not sag, just because my buttock is starting to.
“Fifty Ways to Leave Your Forties” is one of those fun books that you can dip into a little bit here, a little bit there, and come away refreshed with some new ideas, thoughts, and motivation for the day. But then again, once you pick it up, you may not want to put it down. Sheila Key writes with a breezy, upbeat style that sparkles. And like most guys my age who shun medical advice, let alone treatment, I found the contributions to the book by Dr. Peggy Spencer to be not only valuable and reassuring, but delivered in an entertaining and non-preachy style . . . almost makes me want to bump up the date of my next colonoscopy (almost).
I hope we’ll see more from these two authors in the future; at least in another ten years, when the big six zero rolls around (now THAT’s old!).
-Jeff Yeager
Author, The Ultimate Cheapskate’s Road Map to True Riches
Rating: 5 / 5
Sheila Key’s good nature, warmth, and wonderful humor sparkle on every page, and Peggy Spencer’s wise advice balances it perfectly. This book is one of the best gifts you’ll ever give any 50-something friend. . . or yourself.
Rating: 5 / 5
What a consummate achievement this book is. Written by Sheila Key in a folksy, colloquial style, it imparts great wisdom to those who would like to know how to look at their 50’s and beyond as a time of fulfillment and joy. Peggy Spencer also did a great job. I like the “doc in the box” feature – it adds intellectual and thought provoking elements to each of the “ways. ”
I highly recommend you buy this book and enjoy!
Rating: 5 / 5
Have you ever hoped to meet the author of a book you really enjoyed, thinking that you’re just bound to enjoy that person? And then, you actually meet that author and think, YUCK?
Well, that’s not the case with this book. If you are lucky enough to hang out with Sheila Key sometime and you’re like me, you will come away thinking, “geez, not only has she actually LIVED this book, but she is a heck of a lot of fun, too. ”
I know, because I’ve known Sheila for 20 years, and even though we haven’t seen each other in about 10 years, I’ve looked forward every New Year’s to receiving her cleverly homespun newsletters. Through them, I’ve watched her beautiful children grow and seen how Sheila’s smiling face has somehow retained that youthful look of mischief mixed with excitement–no doubt related to some new and interesting pursuit.
Sheila knows a thing or two about nurturing wonder, mental and physical health, creative stimulation, and a juicy existence. So I for one was thrilled when she told me about her book project. Having been her editor when she wrote for a newspaper, I grew accustomed to Sheila always exceeding my expectations (which are exceedingly high). And, since I was just entering my 50s and really needing such a book, I knew Sheila would not let me down.
I’ve just started reading, and if I wait until I finish it to write a review, that could take some time. As I figured out after the first chapter, this isn’t a book you skim through. It’s one you dip into on a regular basis, drink in inspiration, and, thus recharged, go try something new–or remember that long-forgotten thing that brings you joy and lightens your step.
I’ll be back when I have more to report. For now, I just wanted to say I love this little book and am looking forward to knowing it better. As I slog through my long work days (finishing a book of my own), it is my reward at the end of one day–and an inspiration for the next.
Gina Pera, author
Is It You, Me, or Adult A. D. D. ? Stoppingthe Roller Coaster When Someone You Love Has Attention Deficit Disorder
ADHDRollerCoaster. com
Rating: 5 / 5