Available Formats
Out of Time
By (Author) Miranda Sawyer
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
2nd June 2017
18th May 2017
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Humour
305.2440207
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
200g
From the hugely respected journalist Miranda Sawyer, a very modern look at the midlife crisis delving into the truth, and lies, of the experience and how to survive it, with thoughtfulness, insight and humour.
You wake one day and everything is wrong. It's as though you went out one warm evening an evening fizzing with delicious potential, so ripe and sticky-sweet you can taste it on the air for just one drink and woke up two days later in a skip. Except you're not in a skip, you're in an estate car, on the way to an out-of-town shopping mall to buy a balance bike, a roof rack and some stackable storage boxes.
Miranda Sawyers midlife crisis began when she was 44. It wasnt a traditional one. She didnt run off with a Pilates teacher, or blow thousands on a trip to find herself. From the outside, all remained the same. Work, kids, marriage, mortgage, blah. Days, weeks and months whizzed past as she struggled with feeling knowing that she was over halfway through her life. It seemed only yesterday that she was 29, out and about.
Out of Time is not a self-help book. Its an exploration of this sudden crisis, this jolt. It looks at how our tastes, and our bodies, change as we get older. It considers the unexpected new pleasures that the second half of life can offer, from learning to code to taking up running (slowly). Speaking to musicians and artists, friends and colleagues, Miranda asks how they too have confronted midlife, and the lessons, if any, that theyve learned along the way.
A straight-talking handbook for those of us who believe we're still at our peak in middle age but need a few honest signposts Viv Albertine
I spent a lot of time nodding along in agreement to this book as if it was my favourite record* Jeremy Deller
*Hallelujah by Happy Mondays (Weatherall & Oakenfold remix)
Sawyer is at her best articulating with honesty the angst many of this generation feel about getting older the Morrissey of her journalistic generation Sunday Times
Praise for Park and Ride:
A great success Such annihilation has been performed before. John Osborne did it. Sid Vicious was there. But this is prime stuff Independent On Sunday
Like Victoria Wood she has a talent for illuminating the absurdities of how ordinary people live their ordinary lives Observer
'Miranda Sawyer's suburban memoir Park and Ride was as excellent as we expect Julie Burchill, Guardian (Books of the Year)
Miranda Sawyer is an English journalist and broadcaster. Besides her features and radio criticism for the Observer, her writing has appeared in GQ, Vogue and the Guardian. She is a regular arts critic in print, on television and on radio.