![]() She takes it for granted that her readers will have a maid at least. And while Hillis was careful to include advice for those on limited budgets, the book seems aimed more at the well-off. It was written thirty years later, in 1967, yet paradoxically it feels more dated to me. A central theme of this book, as in her earlier ones, is that life take planning and purpose, and some effort, if you want to get the most out of it.ĭespite the similarities to Hillis's earlier books, I didn't enjoy this one nearly as much. There is also a chapter on grandchildren, which is more about how to be a good grandmother. The latter is equally true at twenty, thirty, forty, and fifty.Ĭhapters on the active life, travel, clothes and make-up, illness, housing, dating, and food follow, much as in her earlier books. This little book is written in the belief that you can have as interesting, useful, and even gay life in the sixties and seventies and often the eighties as at any other time in your life. The first to arrive was this one, subtitled "A Guide to the Sixties and Onward and Upward With Some Irreverent Rhymes."Ĭhapter One, "The Young Sixties and Seventies," begins, I was happy to find two of her books available through inter-library loan. ![]() ![]() Reading Jane's review of Marjorie Hillis's Live Alone and Like It reminded me that there were other books by Hillis to read - and now a book about her, The Extra Woman by Joanna Scutts. ![]()
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