Gil Friedman

Biography

Friedman was born in a log cabin in the South, the South Bronx, He has always kept his New York accent. He attended P.S. 95, a public grammar school, and DeWitt Clinton High School, an all boys public high school. He started the University of Michigan at 17 but was unprepared socially. This has been his modus operandi throughout life. He then spent six months in active duty and five and half years in the reserve. After active service, he attended UCLA studying for a PhD in Clinical Psychology, but after two and a half years, he flunked out. He worked as a research psychologist in the defense industry for eighteen months, and then not knowing what to do, he applied to law school since there were no requirements other than having a B.A. On a lark, he applied to Harvard Law School, and much to his amazement, was accepted. At Harvard, he was one of the students there who made the top half of the class possible. After graduation, he settled in San Francisco where he obtained a job in a small firm in San Carlos, about 25 miles south of the city. While there he created, The Goldwater Calendar: Time for a Change??? about Barry Goldwater, the Republican candidate in the 1964 presidential election. After six months at the San Carlos firm, he was fired, one of the happiest days of his life. He next worked as a lawyer in a mixed neighborhood in San Francisco which he enjoyed, but had the thought he wanted to be a university teacher. While teaching Business Law at the University of Connecticut, he wrote his unpublished book about auto insurance entitled Are You Being Taken For a Ride? A chapter of the book entitled 'Why Auto Insurance Rates Keep Going Up' was published in the September 1969 issue of The Atlantic.
After one year at Uconn, he came back to San Francisco to the hippie revolution. As a staff attorney for the Legal Aid Society of Alameda County, he reached the pinnacle of his writing career having five articles published in The New Republic in the space of seven months. After eighteen months at Legal Aid, he was asked to leave because he wasn't filing any big issue cases. He had a few thousand in the bank and wondered if he could go a few months without a job. The legal aid job was the last job Friedman ever had with the exception of teaching Family Law at Warwick University in Coventry, England for eighteen months, which was more of a vacation than a job, but the vacation abruptly ended when he received an advance to write a book on English di...

Where to find Gil Friedman online

Books

Vitamins: To Take Or Not To Take? That Is The Question
Price: $9.95 USD. Words: 124,830. Language: English. Published: October 12, 2020 . Categories: Nonfiction » Health, wellbeing, & medicine » Vitamins, Nonfiction » Health, wellbeing, & medicine » Nutritional supplements
A discussion of vitamins, minerals, and other health issues. I talk about what I take and give the prices that I pay. In the book, I discuss the history of vitamins and their regulation. How vitamins have been treated much like Rodney Dangerfield in medicine. They get no respect.
How to be Totally Unhappy In A Peaceful World
Price: $6.99 USD. Words: 24,620. Language: English. Published: February 27, 2015 . Categories: Nonfiction » Self-improvement » Motivation & inspiration, Nonfiction » Entertainment » Humor & satire » Form / parodies
A Complete Manual with Rules, Exercises, a Midterm, and a Final Exam. A parody on self help books, this book contains 30 rules, that, if completely disregarded will lead to happiness and you will have a lot of laughs along the way. With perhaps the funniest back cover in publishing history.
A Dictionary of Love - Over 650 quotes on love from the profane to the profound arranged alphabetically
Price: $3.99 USD. Words: 30,410. Language: English. Originally Published: March 16, 2012 by Gil Friedman. Categories: Nonfiction » Relationships & Family, Nonfiction » Reference » Quotations
(5.00 from 1 review)
NEW EXPANDED EDITION! A Dictionary of Love with 22 more subject categories and over 50 more authors than the first edition. A Dictionary of Love consists of over 650 quotes on love from the profane to the profound arrange alphabetically in 213 subject categories by more than 350 authors, philosophers and celebrities including Kahlil Gibran, Bertrand Russell, Erich Fromm, and Mother Teresa.
Gurdjieff: A Beginner's Guide - How Changing the Way We React to Misplacing Our Keys Can Transform Our Lives
Price: $9.99 USD. Words: 54,930. Language: English. Originally Published: December 10, 2011 by Gil Friedman. Categories: Nonfiction » Self-improvement » Motivation & inspiration
Are you ready for self-transformation? Many spiritual teachers promise transformation, but Georges Gurdjieff delivers in his body of concepts known as "the Work." Gurdjieff offers a radically original version of man and his potential for self-development. Practical and eminently readable, this guide leads the reader through some of the main concepts necessary for self-transformation.

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