Smart, Stupid and Sixty

Smart, Stupid and Sixty by Nigel Marsh, published by Random House Australia on August 16, 2022, is a memoir that reflects on the author’s journey as he approaches his sixtieth birthday. In this edition, spanning 320 pages, Marsh shares his experiences transitioning from a corporate life to a more introspective existence, highlighting the challenges of balancing career, family, and personal fulfillment. The narrative explores themes of aging, self-doubt, and the pursuit of happiness, offering insights into the complexities of life in one’s later years.
Readers will find a blend of humor and poignancy as Marsh contemplates various aspects of life, including parenting adult children and coping with loss. He questions conventional notions of success while celebrating the joys and privileges that come with aging. This memoir invites reflection on personal growth and the potential for happiness in the years ahead, making it a thoughtful addition to the genres of biography, personal memoirs, and social science.
Official synopsis Publisher
Twenty years ago, Nigel Marsh was an overweight mortgage slave struggling to balance a career, marriage and four children under eight. Until he lost his job.
In Fat, Forty and Fired, Nigel wrote about falling off the corporate hamster wheel and surviving. Now that he’s approaching sixty, he can’t help but notice it’s been a while since he stepped onto that wheel with other hamsters. One day he reads that a graduate trainee who used to work for him in London is now a global CEO with an office on the top floor of a skyscraper in New York. Nigel, by contrast, is wearing a dressing-gown and sitting at his writing desk in a dank storage room under his garage in Sydney. It’s enough to give anyone a moment of self-doubt – even a man whose ground-breaking TED Talk on work/life balance has been downloaded a whopping five million times.
Could it be that Nigel’s most successful days are behind him? Or is conventional success simply that – conventional success? And is it possible that his happiest days lie ahead?
In his memoir for his sixth decade on earth, Nigel ponders ageing well, sex, parenting adult children, his parents’ passing, and the secret to his living a happy life. By turns humorous, thought-provoking, poignant and life-affirming, Smart, Stupid and Sixty is a celebration of the third trimester as a privilege to be enjoyed rather than a sentence to be endured.
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