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Interview: Oliver Burkeman

He's read his way to the secret of happiness

January 20, 2011 14:46
Oliver Burkeman by Jeff Mikkelson

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

4 min read

Oliver Burkeman carries an egg timer wherever he goes. This is not so that he can boil the perfect four-minute egg at a moment's notice, but rather as a tool in his constant battle against procrastination.

The theory surrounding his use of the egg timer, along with many others, is contained within his new self help book - or to be more accurate, his new book on the best advice contained in other self-help and popular psychology books. These volumes are known for the extravagance of their claims, whether it is how to de-stress your life, make you a millionaire or date a supermodel. However it is a safe bet that Burkeman will not face action under the Trades Descriptions Act. His book Help! is modestly subtitled How to Become Slightly Happier and Get a Bit More Done.

Burkeman, a journalist, claims no psychological qualifications and offers no single formula to happiness. Rather, the book is an attempt to distill the best advice from the self-help genre and offer helpful tips delivered with a healthy dose of scepticism.

He has a geeky appetite for self-improvement books. "I think there is a fairly universal urge for what they promise, even if at the same time you are thinking that you are far too smart to fall for that."

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