A review by robertrivasplata
The Life of Samuel Johnson by James Boswell

funny informative reflective relaxing slow-paced

4.5

I can't believe I read the whole thing!
More than 5 years after starting on Pat Barker's great introduction from 1979, I finally finished Life of Johnson, & commenced to re-read the introduction, which made more sense having read the work. Life of Johnson really is a good book to read in little bits and pieces over the course of five years or so. Now that I am finished with this great work, the time has come for me to embark on the great work of writing the goodreads review of The Life of Johnson. Good book for picking up and reading random excerpts. Perfect read to look like you are engrossed in a cerebral read & not interested in conversation, similar to the Accidental Tourist's use of "Miss Macintosh, my Darling". If you want to return to your place, you just flip back to the beginning of whatever dinner party, conversation, you left off in the middle of. Perhaps the most true biography in that it highlights how much of even an extraordinary life is mostly a show about nothing. Scratches my itch for Georgian-era literary English & also has very many quotable quotes, such as: "Never impose tasks upon mortals. To require two things is the way to have them both undone", or, "Sir, your wife under pretense of keeping a bawdy-house, is a receiver of stolen goods." That second quote has the advantage of being both humorous & puzzling. There are actually very many hilarious moments in the Life of Johnson, with many other quotes too long & too numerous to reproduce & still have a readable goodreads review. Apart from the amusement factor, The Life of Johnson is also provides a great look at the publishing & literary world of 18th century London. Boswell also shows some of the work that went into historical & biographical research, showing us his & Johnson's letters to librarians, scholars, & acquaintances of their respective biographical subjects. Questions such as the distinction between a Physician & a Doctor of Medicine are also of interest, at the very least shedding light on the fact that those were the types of things people talked about in 1775.