Search - Bridget Jones's Guide to Life

Used Book ~ Bridget Jones's Guide to Life by author Helen Fielding
Bridget Jones's Guide to Life
Author: Helen Fielding
Book Information
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
Book Type: Paperback
Rating: 39

ISBN-13: 9780142000212 - ISBN-10: 0142000213
Publication Date: 4/11/2001
Pages: 64

Book Description:
Publisher Comments:
She'll help you get your life in order. She'll help you get your home in order. Or she'll at least help you place a take-out order.

"Cuisine is not merely a question of ordering a pizza – no! Many factors come into play – including finding the pizza menu, decision-making, and obtaining a clean knife with which to cut it. How true this is of all life."

In this elegant and practical handbook, Bridget Jones – the intrepid thirty-something Singleton on a permanent but doomed quest for self-improvement – offers a road to perfection in the fields of cooking, streamlined inner thighs and poise, spiritual and romantic nirvana, accounting, an understanding of Feng Shui, what men think they might feel they want, and creating a fragrant home. She's read the self-help books – all of them. And committed most of them to memory. Now Bridget breaks out on her own to give readers the benefit – benefit? – of her rich experience.

"... This is not anything like a new Bridget Jones book. It's a revisiting of old jokes, old characters, old stories. That said, there's something curiously addictive about Helen Fielding's creation, and this bonbon should satisfy a Jones jones until the (inevitable) next full-length novel comes along.

The Guide to Life is a brief (64 pages) how-to manual from the notoriously inept singleton. To wit: In her chapter on homemaking (titled "The Fragrant Home"), Bridget gives her reader advice on the atmospheric charm of a cozy fire. "The key words here are 'in the grate.'" As to food, she largely confines herself to finding a piece of old cheese in the fridge and cutting off the moldy bits. She does, however, get in one really useful suggestion when she explains how to play the parlor game Shag, Marry or Push off a Cliff. The rules? "Each of the players suggests three names.... The person on the player's right must then decide, if they absolutely had to shag one of them, marry another, and push another off a cliff, which it would be. It is usually best to pick three which are similar in some way." Examples: Russell Crowe, Mr. Darcy, Hugh Grant. Or, Muammar al-Qaddafi, Ayatollah Khomeini, Idi Amin. The author then adds a caveat of typically Jonesian sensitivity: "It doesn't matter if any of them are dead as it is only a game." For those who cry foul at Helen Fielding's cashing in on her phenomenal franchise, it should be noted that some of the proceeds from the book will go to Comic Relief. That's the very organization, incidentally, that the author sends up in her non-Jones novel Cause Celeb--a smart, highly entertaining book that also makes a decent stopgap for Bridgetphiliacs. --Claire Dederer"

Similar books to this author and title:
Used Book ~ Bridget Jones's DiaryUsed Book ~ Bridget Jones: The Edge of ReasonUsed Book ~ Cause CelebUsed Book ~ Olivia Joules and the Overactive ImaginationUsed Book ~ Helen Fielding's Bridget Jones Diary: A Reader's Guide (Continuum Contemporaries)


Genres:

Top Member Reviews

Jennifer R. from MARQUETTE, MI wrote on 1/16/2007...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

A brief (64 pages) how-to manual from the notoriously inept singleton. To wit: In her chapter on homemaking (titled "The Fragrant Home"), Bridget gives her reader advice on the atmospheric charm of a cozy fire. "The key words here are 'in the grate.'" As to food, she largely confines herself to finding a piece of old cheese in the fridge and cutting off the moldy bits. She does, however, get in one really useful suggestion when she explains how to play the parlor game Shag, Marry or Push off a Cliff. The rules? "Each of the players suggests three names.... The person on the player's right must then decide, if they absolutely had to shag one of them, marry another, and push another off a cliff, which it would be. It is usually best to pick three which are similar in some way." Examples: Russell Crowe, Mr. Darcy, Hugh Grant. Or, Muammar al-Qaddafi, Ayatollah Khomeini, Idi Amin. The author then adds a caveat of typically Jonesian sensitivity: "It doesn't matter if any of them are dead as it is only a game."

Karen U. (editorgrrl) from NEW HAVEN, CT wrote on 5/31/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

A slim (64-page) self-help trade paperback written as if by Bridget Jones (Helen Fielding's most famous character). Below, my favorite passage. (This takes up an entire page, and it's one of the wordiest.)

Games
These can be tremendous fun at social occasions when conversation is in danger of drying up, or if guests need distracting from the food. Here is one of my favorites!!

Shag, marry or push off a cliff
In turn, each of the players suggests three names, e.g. Jeffrey Archer, Mohammed Al Fayed, Jonathon Aitken. The person on the player's right must then decide, if they absolutely had to shag one of them, marry another, and push another off a cliff, which it would be.
It is usually best to pick three which are similar in some way.
-- Russell Crowe, Mr. Darcy, Hugh Grant
-- Colonel Gaddafi, the Ayatollah Khomeini, Idi Amin
-- Tony Blair, Bill Clinton, Al Gore
-- Mick Jagger, Paul McCartney, Sting

It doesn't matter if any of them are dead as it is only a game. This is also tremendous fun with lists of real people whom one knows. (Though this can be a little cruel. And should never be played with lists of people who are actually in the room.)

Melissa O. (melissao) from WILMINGTON, NC wrote on 1/15/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

super funny! if you loved the first two...you'll really enjoy this one. need not have read the first to enjoy this book.

Cherie B. (CheriePie) from WILMINGTON, MA wrote on 10/4/2005...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

This was a cute and quirky, funny little read, just perfect after finishing The Edge of Reason as I just did. It's Bridget's form of a mini self help book, imparting all the wisdom she's gleaned in her adventures, such as cooking tips, dating advice, etc. Her methods, though delusional, are true-to-form Bridget. :)


Rate These Member Reviews

Lisabeth W. (huhdragon) from EVANSTON, IL wrote on 2/4/2007...


Amusing.

Jennifer H. (Jaide) from MACHESNEY PK, IL wrote on 3/11/2006...


A great book. Very short though!

Michelle D. (ShellyD77) from MANCHESTER, NH wrote on 12/5/2005...


Cute little book

Juanita B. from SEATTLE, WA wrote on 8/14/2005...


If you enjoyed the Bridget Jones series by Helen Fielding, you will get a kick out of this further glimpse into the world of Singleton.

(From the back cover)
In this elegant and practical handbook, Bridget Jones - the intrepid thirty-something Singleton on a permanent but doomed quest for self-improvement - offers a road to perfection in the fields of cooking, streamlined inner thighs and poise, spiritual and romantic nirvana, accounting, and understanding of Feng Shui, what men think they might feel they want, and creating a fragrant home. She's read the self-help books - all of them. and committed most of them to memory. Now Bridget breaks out on her own to give readers the benefit - benefit? -of her rich experience.