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If you are
after a little pick-me-up, then this might be just the book for you. Based on Ozzy Osbourne’s columns in the British Sunday Times, “Trust me, I’m Dr. Ozzy” is jam-packed with advice on health, hygiene, diet and exercise, as well as guidance for all manner of medical situations. And after all, who would be better qualified to give out medical advice? Ozzy Osbourne has sampled every drug (legal or otherwise) known to man, so he’s bound to know what the side-affects are. He’s also swallowed a bumble bee at seventy mph, tasted bat, (and endured the weeks of rabies shots that followed) broken his neck in a quad-bike accident, been misdiagnosed with Parkinson’s, been declared clinically dead, and survived an incident where a plane crashed into his tour bus.

Paul Henry, love him or loathe him, there doesn’t seem to be any middle ground here. But actually now that I’ve read his book – I’m a bit of a fan. Having only seen him occasionally on the Breakfast show, I didn’t really know a lot about Paul Henry, (not withstanding his rather infamous gaffes) so this highly entertaining memoir has been a real eye-opener.
Director of the British Museum, Neil MacGregor, uses 100 objects from the museum to give a brief history of the World. The format is very accessible - each chapter starts with a photograph of an object, followed by a detailed description (which makes you go back and look at the photo and actually ‘see’ the object properly) and then the author provides some context for the object – when it was made, where it was found (and how it came to be there) and what was happening in the World at that particular time. So for example, there is a picture of what looks to me like a bit of old rock, but after reading MacGregor’s description I go back to the picture and with new eyes I can see what the item actually is – an ancient sculpture of two lovers entwined.
Just wanted to highlight this gorgeous book by Jana Ririnui. Ririnui was born in Invercargill and is now based in London. He started out at age 14, working for free in a local hair salon before moving to Australia to realise his dream of becoming a hairdresser. It was in Australia that he was approached by a modelling agency and, whilst Ririnui loved the modelling lifestyle, he soon discovered that it was in make-up artistry where his true passion lay.
If y
ou’re feeling a little lost, don’t know what to do with your life, you have no direction and wonder ‘what’s it all about?’, then this may be just the book for you. Dan Millman, who also wrote “The life you were born to live” and “The way of the peaceful warrior”, has distilled a lifetime of experience into this concise volume. Millman defines our four main life purposes: learning life’s lessons, finding your career and calling, discovering your life path, and, attending to this arising moment.