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Book Review Rosemary Friedman's Final Draft

“People need to choose happiness; they need to agree that they want it, deserve it and have it. “

November 2, 2017 16:08
rosemary-friedman
2 min read

Books of essays are perfect travelling companions. They are designed to dip into, finding a subject that takes your fancy, and are long enough to be satisfying, short enough to entertain.

Find the right author and you feel as though you are having a fascinating conversation, albeit one in which the other person is doing all the work and providing anecdotes and just the right quotes. With the wrong author, however, you quickly realise that you are bring preached at by a bore. Rosemary Friedman’s book Final Draft thankfully falls into the former category.

At 88, she has written novels, scripts, plays, non-fiction and short stories. Final Draft is her valedictory collection, with the sub-title Reflections on Life. And those reflections cover the stuff of life, from sex and marriage, technology and travel, to grief and happiness — on which she concludes: “People need to choose happiness; they need to agree that they want it, deserve it and have it. “

My favourite essays are the ones where Friedman’s life experience comes into play — often playfully — and she views the present through the lens of the past.