Better to Be Lucky than Smart!

Better to Be Lucky than Smart!

$18.99

Bill Mares
September 24, 2024

“A wild ride of a memoir.”
Sue Miller, New York Times bestselling author of Monogamy

Quantity:
Pre-Order

Release Date: September 24, 2024
Size:
6 x 9
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-57869-283-5
Library of Congress Control Number:
TBD
Booksellers and Libraries:
Order Info Here or at Ingram.

SYNOPSIS

"Come along with me, and I'll make it worth your while," says Bill Mares. In his new memoir Better To Be Lucky than Smart, Mares captures exactly what it is that makes him tick—or run, or sing, or teach, or write, or fish. Written in a welcoming and absorbing tone, this book sums up a life of exploration and curiosity. Complete with photographs, cartoons, and an introduction by Don Hooper!


Advanced PRAISE

“From a small town in Texas to the battlefields of Europe, from a vast Arabian desert to a single Vermont bee, Bill Mares tells his life’s plucky and lucky American story. Pour yourself a home brew, put your feet up, and enjoy a first-rate yarn.”

—Stephen P. Kiernan, author of The Glass Chateau and other books

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“When asked to define most people, one or two words will usually do. But defining Bill Mares? You need a paragraph, a long one at that. This lovely memoir reveals the secrets of a man with a dozen or so passions in his life, who has graciously passed on his wisdom to tens of thousands. How has he done it? Some hints: Being open to adventure, finding great mentors, having a little luck (like getting on a certain elevator in Chicago), and making a fortuitous decision to move to Vermont. In this memoir, you’ll learn about the author and take away lessons for yourself.”

—John Donnelly, former journalist at the Boston Globe, advisor at the World Bank

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“Bill Mares’ fourteenth book so grabbed my attention, I read it in two sittings. Like the luminous art of the Hudson River School, its narrative ebbs and flows in the intimate landscape of his many years as an observer of people, their ethos, and culture. Transcending memoir, Mares invokes the world in which he grew up from the beginning of World War II to the present. Read this book. You will not be disappointed.”

—Bill Schubart, author Lila & Theron

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“Reading Better to Be Lucky Than Smart is like catching up with an old friend who has a lifetime’s worth of great stories. Bill Mares’ new memoir is captivating, compelling, at times deeply moving, often delightfully funny, and always filled to the brim with the joy of life.” 

—Reeve Lindbergh, author of Two Lives and 26 other books for both adults and children

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“Is there any adventure Bill Mares has stumbled on in his long life that he’s said no thanks to? Clearly not. His new book, Better to Be Lucky than Smart, is a wild ride of a memoir that is an account of the crazily disparate experiences that have constituted that life, and of how Mares came to be the person he is. 

He joined the Marines as a young man—and afterwards published a book with Doubleday about basic training. A book with remarkable photographs, taken, yes, by him, a skill he developed while working at The Chicago Sun Times. For a while he was a high-school history teacher in Vermont, and then for another while, a member of that state’s legislature. He’s written a few other books—eighteen in all, he tells us—on various other interests: beekeeping, home brewing, Vermont humor, on the crossing of the Nafud Desert by camel, following the journey of an ancient poet—a book with more extraordinary photographs.

Oh, he’s also a long-distance runner, a family man, and a choral singer. And somewhere along the way he learned to play the bagpipes. Of course he did.”

—Sue Miller, New York Times bestselling author of Monogamy

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“Everyone is interesting. Some lives are extraordinary. Bill Mares has tested life’s waters in many ways, among them as an author, journalist, photographer, marathoner, singer, teacher, explorer, beekeeper, family man, and beer brewer. His memoir of an energetic and restless soul where curiosity and imagination were given free rein is a fun, sometimes bumpy ride through the origins and highlights of several careers, adventurous globetrotting, and consuming hobbies.”

—Fran Stoddard, former host of Vermont Public’s Profile


MEET THE AUTHOR

Author photo by Jan Peyser.

Raised in Texas and educated at Harvard, Bill Mares has been a journalist, state legislator and high school teacher. He has authored or co-authored 19 books and lives in Burlington, Vermont.