"How to Live on 24 Hours a Day" by Arnold Bennett is a practical guide focused on time management and personal development. The book offers insightful advice on how to effectively utilize 24 hours each day to enhance productivity and achieve a balanced life. Bennett provides strategies for improving efficiency and making the most of one's daily routines. He emphasizes the importance of self-improvement and practical techniques for better time utilization. The book addresses the challenges of balancing work and personal life, offering tips on how to integrate productive habits into everyday activities.
Through a blend of motivational insights and actionable recommendations, Bennett's guide helps readers optimize their daily schedules, ensuring that every hour contributes to their personal growth and overall well-being. "How to Live on 24 Hours a Day" is a valuable resource for anyone seeking to enhance their life balance and achieve greater success through effective time management.
Enoch Arnold Bennett was a prominent English novelist, born on 27 May 1866, in Staffordshire. His father Enoch Bennett was a solicitor and Sarah Ann was mother. Bennett did his schooling locally in Burslem. At the age of 16 years, he became a clerk in his father's office. Later, he went London and worked in another solicitor firm. After sometimes he entered in the literary world and became editor of the magazine woman. His first novel, 'A Man from the North's was published in 1898, success motivated him and he devoted his life in literary writing. In 1908, his masterpiece 'The Old Wives Tale' was published and he gained prestige of a legendary author. He wrote 34 novels, seven volumes of short stories, 13 plays in collaboration, articles and journals for 100 of newspapers. His popular works - Anna of the Five Towns, Clay Hanger, Hilda Less Ways, These Twain, The Clay - Hanger Family, The Strange Vanguard, Accident, Imperial Palace, Riceyman Steps, How to Live on 24 Hours a Day etc. During First World War, he served his nation in official and unofficial position. He became member of the War Propaganda Committee. Arnold Bennett died in 1931 suffering from typhoid.