This is on my list of all-time favourite books - books which I regularly re-read whenever the mood takes me. It is, as the title suggests, about Oliver who sets off on his travels in response to redundancy. It is about learning, about relationships, about humour, and about that journey we all make from cradle to grave. The character of Oliver is one I identify with - as I do Trevor Chaplin from Alan Plater's Beiderbecke series - a teacher of comparative religion and a crossword enthusiast his musings on life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness strike a philosophical note that reverberates with me and my own perspectives on how to cope with the modern world. Oliver, for me, is a role model who embodies a healthy disregard for convention. He seems to represent in his humorous, anarchic view of authority a sense of the genuine, the real. He is dismissive of the pompous, vacuous nature of those individuals who aspire to control both their own surroundings and the rest of us. Plater has drawn a man of the people, a sounding-board of how humanity can, and why it needs to survive. It is life-affirming and optimistic. It speaks to me. Oliver and Diane make me feel life is worth living.