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The Rogue's Road to Retirement: How I Got My Groove Back after Sixty-Five?And How You Can, Too!

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Rogue's Road to Retirement: How I Got My Groove Back after Sixty-Five?And How You Can, Too!
Authors and Contributors      By (author) George S. K. Rider
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 210,Width 140
Category/GenreCoping with old age
Retirement
ISBN/Barcode 9781629147666
ClassificationsDewey:646.79
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Skyhorse Publishing
Imprint Skyhorse Publishing
Publication Date 22 January 2015
Publication Country United States

Description

George S. K. Riders "The Rogues Road to Retirement" takes a unique approach to growing old (don't do it!), with a gentle poke at society for treating retirees as a liability rather than a valuable asset waiting to be tapped. After retiring, Rider embarks on a bumpy journey to find himself and a new lease on life. For the first time he gets in touch

Author Biography

George S. K. Rider attended Phillips Academy Andover and Yale University before enlisting in the U.S. navy. He spent many years on Wall Street as a trader. At age seventy-four, he began writing and has published articles in The Tin Can Sailor, the Great South Bay Magazine, and The Southampton Review. He lives in Essex, Connecticut.

Reviews

"George Rider is a sage, a rascal, a raconteur, a patriot, and a supreme sentimentalist, who trains his gimlet eye (more accurately, his vodka-gimlet eye) on the passages and rituals of American life and family. He is also a literary revelation: the fresh new voice of the Bad-Boy Octogenarian." -- David Friend, Vanity Fair editor of creative development "George Rider is a sage, a rascal, a raconteur, a patriot, and a supreme sentimentalist, who trains his gimlet eye (more accurately, his vodka-gimlet eye) on the passages and rituals of American life and family. He is also a literary revelation: the fresh new voice of the Bad-Boy Octogenarian." -- David Friend, Vanity Fair editor of creative development