Reviews
"Excellent . . . Montaigne celebrates life in all its glorious messiness, while reminding us that nothing matters more than human connectedness and kindness to people and animals. An endlessly digressive writer, Montaigne is as much raconteur as moralist, and his book offers some of the best after-dinner conversation in the world. You can never be sure what this French humanist will say next . . . Frampton approaches Montaigne from unexpected tangents . . . Where [he] excels is in his sharply intelligent and sharply phrased insights . . . Compared with [Sarah Bakewell's] How to Live , Frampton's is a much tighter and more elegant work." -Michael Dirda, The Washington Post "Winning . . . Perceptive . . . Frampton tells the story of how history, culture, and personal genius conspired to create a new literary genre-and a literary master for the ages . . . Although they were first published more than four centuries ago, Montaigne's essays can seem as topical as the morning newspaper. As more than one admirer has discovered, Montaigne's essential gift-the art of conversation rendered on the page-is a timeless one." -Danny Heitman, The Christian Science Monitor "In Montaigne's intense self-absorption, Frampton discerns the rich literary fruit of a stunning midlife volte-face . . . Frampton underscores the essential humaneness of Montaigne's life . . . Recognizing the twenty-first century's own need for advocates of life-affirming tolerance, readers will embrace this insightful portrait." -Bryce Christensen, Booklist (starred review) "Ingenious . . . Passionately written and full to bursting with digressions and anecdotes, Frampton's book does an excellent job of bringing Montaigne and his historical context to life. It is this vivid evocation of the time that emerges as the book's greatest strength. We see how the philosopher's celebration of daily life . . . went against not only the dominant philosophical currents of the day but also the violent upheavals of 16th-century France. What comes through the strongest is an inspiring sense of the philosopher's remarkable independence of thought and enduring relevance." -Edward King, The Sunday Times (London) "One of the best books I have read on Montaigne . . . Frampton argues that to read Montaigne is 'to touch base with oneself' and to learn how to act within our capacities, to accept and even to savour them . . . He demonstrates that the more Montaigne observed ordinary life, the more remarkable he found it, and the more he felt impelled to plunge back into its mess . . . Four centuries on, Montaigne still speaks to us." -Nicholas Shakespeare, The Daily Telegraph (London) "With deceptive casualness, Frampton renders a rigorous history of ideas in this engaging account of the life and the work of Michel de Montaigne . . . His extraordinary achievement is in conveying-and inviting the reader to commune with-Montaigne's unique sensibility and his take on death, sex, travel, friendship, kidney stones, the human thumb, and above all, 'the power of the ordinary and the unremarkable, the value of the here-and-now' . . . This scholarly romp through the Renaissance is a jewel." - Publishers Weekly (starred review), "With deceptive casualness, Frampton renders a rigorous history of ideas in this engaging account of the life and the work of Michel de Montaigne . . . His extraordinary achievement is in conveying-and inviting the reader to commune with-Montaigne's unique sensibility and his take on death, sex, travel, friendship, kidney stones, the human thumb, and above all, 'the power of the ordinary and the unremarkable, the value of the here-and-now' . . . This scholarly romp through the Renaissance is a jewel." - Publishers Weekly (starred review)