Keep Happy by Eustace Miles

(8 User reviews)   1320
By Caleb Zhao Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - Design
Miles, Eustace, 1868-1948 Miles, Eustace, 1868-1948
English
So I picked up this old book called 'Keep Happy' from 1909, thinking it would be a quaint period piece. What I found completely surprised me. Forget what you think you know about old-fashioned advice. This book is like stumbling across your great-grandfather's secret journal, only to discover he was way ahead of his time. Eustace Miles, a champion tennis player and food faddist from the Edwardian era, basically wrote an early self-help manual. But here's the twist: his 'secret' to happiness isn't about positive thinking or getting rich. It's a weirdly modern, almost radical system built on posture, breathing, and what he calls 'thinking in curves.' He argues we make ourselves miserable by clenching our jaws, hunching our shoulders, and thinking in rigid, straight lines. The whole book is his passionate plea to unclench, both physically and mentally. It's bizarre, charming, and shockingly relevant. Reading it feels like getting life advice from a cheerful, slightly eccentric uncle who also happens to be an athlete. If you've ever felt stressed and thought, 'People must have had it easier back then,' this book will prove you wonderfully wrong.
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Published in 1909, Keep Happy is less a story with a plot and more a friendly, persistent conversation with its author. Eustace Miles was a real character—a Cambridge scholar, a champion tennis player, and a man obsessed with health and diet. This book is his manifesto, a collection of his philosophies on how to live a joyful life.

The Story

There's no narrative in the traditional sense. Instead, Miles lays out his 'system' for happiness across short, punchy chapters. He starts with a simple, physical idea: our bad moods are literally shaped by our bodies. A frown, a clenched fist, shallow breathing—these aren't just symptoms of unhappiness; they're its cause. His core instruction is to practice 'curves': soften your eyes, relax your jaw, stand tall, and breathe deeply. He then applies this to the mind. 'Straight-line' thinking—worry, rigid opinions, forcing solutions—leads to strain. 'Curve' thinking—flexibility, open-mindedness, going with the flow—leads to peace. He fills the pages with practical exercises, anecdotes from his tennis career, and gentle challenges to the reader to try it for themselves.

Why You Should Read It

What's fascinating is how this century-old book accidentally speaks to our modern anxieties. Miles is essentially talking about mindfulness and somatic therapy long before they were mainstream terms. His advice to 'stop trying so hard' and 'let the game come to you' feels directly applicable to our burnout culture. It's not about ignoring problems, but about approaching them from a place of relaxed readiness instead of tense panic. His voice is the best part—earnest, encouraging, and completely convinced he's found the answer. You can almost see him grinning as he writes.

Final Verdict

This book is a hidden gem for anyone interested in the history of wellness, fans of quirky old manuals, or people who just need a gentle, unusual reminder to lighten up. It's not a scientific text, and some of his dietary ideas are very much of his time. But at its heart, Keep Happy is a timeless, charming pep talk. Perfect for the curious reader who enjoys a dose of history with their self-improvement, or anyone who needs permission to unclench their jaw and take a deep breath. It's a happy little artifact that still works.



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Ethan Lewis
1 year ago

I stumbled upon this title and the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. A true masterpiece.

Noah Brown
7 months ago

Very helpful, thanks.

Michelle Harris
1 year ago

After hearing about this author multiple times, the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. Thanks for sharing this review.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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