John-Paul Flintoff is a journalist, artist and performer who has delivered talks across four continents to audiences of as many as 5,000 people. He has worked as a writer and editor at the Financial Times and The Sunday Times, trained in improvisational theatre and has published five books, including How to Change the World. He lives in London.
I gave my first public speech at 15, at my Granny's funeral, and I
wish I'd had this book then. Not because it would have changed what
I said, but because it would have reassured me. My words, though
carefully chosen and sincere, were not what people expected. But
they were adequate, and this book would have told me that this was
OK. Had I had Jean-Paul Flintoff's warm wit to guide me through my
subsequent years of public speaking, I might have been a good deal
better than adequate. Flintoff is erudite and playful and, despite
the modesty, rigorous. This is about much more than adequate public
speaking. It is about life. And it is great.
*Angus Cameron – Academic, Author and Voice & Performance
Coach*
I absolutely loved this. What did I love? I loved the cheeky tone,
the artless blurting, the pithiness, the constant breaking of the
fourth wall and defying convention about how to write a how-to
book. I loved the vulnerability and honesty. This is a subject
which, as he says, has been written about many times before, but
never with such refreshing chutzpah and humour. The book itself is
a masterclass in its own subject.
*— Jenny Rogers, Executive coach, speaker, and author of Are You
Listening? (Penguin Business 2021)*
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