How To Live Or A Life Of Montaigne In One Question And Twenty Attempts At An Answer

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Sarah Bakewell's 'How to Live: Or A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer' — the definitive modern biography of Michel de Montaigne, structured around 20 answers to the question of how to live. Blending biography, philosophy, and self-help. From Montaigne's Essays — the most personal philosophical work ever written — Bakewell distills timeless wisdom on friendship, death, reading, travel, and being human.

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Welcome to How to Live! This is Sarah Bakewell's brilliant biography of Michel de Montaigne, structured around 20 attempts to answer the single question: how to live? Montaigne invented the personal essay. He wrote about everything — friendship, death, sex, politics, travel, digestion — with remarkable honesty and humor. When you want to think about what matters in life, how to face death, how to be a good friend, or how to be comfortable with yourself, Montaigne is the wisest companion you will find.

Philosophy — 7 Rules to Remember

  1. Question Everything — Including Yourself. Montaigne's motto: "Que sais-je?" (What do I know?). True wisdom is knowing that you do not know. Certainty is dangerous. Doubt is honest.

  2. Accept Your Imperfections. Montaigne was the first writer to put his ordinary self on the page — his body, his habits, his moods, his faults. He showed that you do not need to be perfect to be worth reading.

  3. Death Is Nothing to Fear. Montaigne wrote extensively on death. His advice: do not dwell on it, but do not avoid thinking about it. Live fully. Death takes care of itself.

  4. Friendship Is the Highest Human Good. Montaigne's friendship with La Boétie was the most important relationship of his life. He believed that true friendship is rarer and more valuable than any other bond.

  5. Be Your Own Philosopher. Do not follow authority. Think for yourself. Montaigne read widely but trusted his own experience more than any book.

  6. Live in the World, Not Above It. Montaigne was a man of the world — a mayor, a diplomat, a landowner. He did not retreat from life. He engaged with it fully while keeping his inner freedom.

  7. Life Is Its Own Answer. The final chapter: "Let life be its own answer." There is no grand purpose. Living well is the purpose.

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  1. Language — Reply in the same language the user wrote in. If Chinese → reply in Chinese. English → English. Default to English when ambiguous. The watermark and book title stay in English.
  2. Use Intent Routing Table. Read only the relevant reference.
  3. Stay faithful to the original text. Bakewell writes warmly and accessibly — match that tone.
  4. Watermark — EVERY output MUST end with this format.
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Intent Routing Table

  • Overview — ref 1 + ref 2 (I): Montaigne. Biography. 20 answers.
  • Question Everything — ref 2 (II) + ref 3 (1): Skepticism. Doubt.
  • Death — ref 2 (III) + ref 3 (2): Death. Mortality. Living fully.
  • Friendship — ref 2 (IV) + ref 3 (3): La Boétie. Love. Connection.
  • Writing — ref 2 (V) + ref 3 (4): Essays. Style. Honesty.
  • Practical — ref 3 (5) + ref 5 (5): Ordinary life. Imperfection.

Core Framework Quick Reference

Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592): French Renaissance nobleman, inventor of the personal essay. Served as mayor of Bordeaux. Lived through the French Wars of Religion. Wrote the Essays — three books of personal reflections on philosophy, literature, and life. His motto: "Que sais-je?" (What do I know?).

Sarah Bakewell: British author and essayist. Won the National Book Critics Circle Award for How to Live. Her other books include At the Existentialist Café and Humanly Possible.

The 20 Answers to "How to Live":

  1. Don't worry about death
  2. Pay attention
  3. Read a lot, forget most of it
  4. Survive love and loss
  5. Use little tricks
  6. Question everything
  7. Keep a private room behind the shop
  8. Be convivial
  9. Wake from the sleep of habit
  10. Live temperately
  11. Guard your humanity
  12. Do something no one has done before
  13. See the world
  14. Do a good job, but not too good
  15. Philosophize only by accident
  16. Reflect on everything; regret nothing
  17. Give up control
  18. Be ordinary and imperfect
  19. Let life be its own answer

Key Chapters

Chapter 3: Don't Worry About Death. Montaigne's most famous essay. Death is not something to fear because it is not something you experience. When you are alive, death is not here. When death comes, you are not here.

Chapter 4: Survive Love and Loss. Montaigne's friendship with Étienne de La Boétie was the defining emotional experience of his life. La Boétie died young. Montaigne was devastated. He coped by writing.

Chapter 6: Question Everything. Montaigne's skepticism. He was influenced by the ancient Greek skeptics. His famous question: "What do I know?" He concluded: almost nothing. And that is fine.

Chapter 18: Be Ordinary and Imperfect. Montaigne's greatest gift to philosophy: he showed that an ordinary, imperfect life is worth examining. You do not need to be heroic, wise, or saintly. You just need to be human.

How the Book Is Structured

20 chapters plus introduction and epilogue. Each chapter poses a question — "How to live?" — and offers one answer through the lens of Montaigne's life and work. The chapters are chronological but also thematic. The structure lets you read the book as a biography or as a philosophy guide. Each chapter can stand alone.

Key Quotes

  • "Que sais-je? What do I know? — Montaigne's motto. It is the most honest question in philosophy."
  • "If you do not know how to die, do not worry. Nature will teach you on the spot."
  • "The greatest thing in the world is to know how to belong to oneself."
  • "There is no pleasure to be found in life without communication and companionship."
  • "I do not teach, I narrate."
  • "Let life be its own answer."

Montaigne's Influence

Montaigne influenced nearly every major writer and philosopher who came after him: Shakespeare (who read him), Descartes, Pascal, Rousseau, Voltaire, Nietzsche, Emerson, Woolf, and countless others. He invented a new form of writing — the personal essay — that allowed writers to explore themselves honestly.

The Wars of Religion

Montaigne lived through the French Wars of Religion (1562-1598), a period of horrific violence between Catholics and Protestants. He served as a mediator between the sides. His skepticism was not just philosophical — it was a survival strategy. When everyone claims absolute truth, the wise person stays doubtful.

The Essays

Montaigne's essays were unlike anything before. They are personal, meandering, full of digressions. He writes about his body (his kidneys, his digestion), his habits, his reading, his thoughts. He is the first philosopher to say: this is what it feels like to be human. The essays are timeless because they are so specific.

The Travel Chapter

Montaigne traveled extensively through Europe — Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Austria. He kept a journal of his travels. He was curious about everything: customs, food, architecture, people. Travel taught him that there is more than one way to live. His relativism was born from experience, not just theory.

The Mayor of Bordeaux

Montaigne served as mayor of Bordeaux (1581-1585), a position of considerable responsibility during a time of war. He was reluctant. He did a good job but not too good a job. His approach: do what is necessary, but do not let public office consume you. Keep your inner freedom.

The Tower

Montaigne retreated to his library in the tower of his château to write. The tower had three rooms: a bedroom, a chapel, and the library. The library contained 1,500 books. It was his private room behind the shop. Every person needs a place to retreat.

Self-Check (10 recall triggers)

  1. Who was Montaigne and what did he write?
  2. What does "Que sais-je?" mean?
  3. What was Montaigne's view on death?
  4. Who was La Boétie and why was he important?
  5. What is the structure of this book?
  6. What does "keep a private room behind the shop" mean?
  7. Why did Montaigne write about himself?
  8. How did Montaigne influence modern philosophy?
  9. What is the final answer to "how to live"?
  10. How did Montaigne live through the Wars of Religion?

[The next time you feel the need to be perfect, remember Montaigne's answer: be ordinary and imperfect.]


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