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A WAKE-UP CALL FOR ROBIN SHARMA

▶ Rather than walk us through the benefits of ‘The 5am Club,’ the author cloaks them in a work of fiction – an approach that’s just perplexing, writes Ben East

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The 5am Club Robin Sharma HarperColl­ins

Rock star leadership guru, bestsellin­g author and self-help expert Robin Sharma wants you to own your morning. By doing so, promises the Canadian, you will elevate your life. Unfortunat­ely, being a member of his newly minted 5am club does actually mean getting up before the crack of dawn – and resisting the urge to reach for your phone to check for news of vacuous celebrity escapades that occurred when you were, briefly, asleep.

Instead, you must Move, Reflect and Grow, in three 20-minute segments. But the benefits he believes will come your way are compelling. You will become a visionary thinker. Develop a formidable inner life, become ultra fit and an amazing leader. Set that alarm now, and “welcome to the first day of a substantia­lly better life.”

Still not convinced? Neither are we. But not because the benefits to be gained from getting up early aren’t entirely plausible. The sheer number of books about or by successful people (Richard Branson, Michelle Obama, PepsiCo’s recently retired Indra Nooyi) who rise before dawn is staggering – to the point where it seems odd that Sharma is heading down such a well-travelled path for his new book. His argument is that The 5am

Club is actually the culminatio­n of a concept he’s been honing for more than 20 years, which has helped his clients “accomplish epic results while upgrading their happiness, helpfulnes­s and feelings of aliveness.”

The real problems with The

5am Club, then, are not his ideas but how Sharma has chosen to present them. Rather than walk us through the processes and benefits of his 20/20/20 Formula – effectivel­y you do some exercise between 5am and 5.20am; write, meditate, plan or contemplat­e between 5.20am and 5.40am and then read books, listen to podcasts or “review goals” for the last third of the the hour – he chooses to cloak all this in a fictional story of an entreprene­ur and an artist who meet an eccentric, seemingly homeless man (actually a billionair­e tycoon), who becomes their secret mentor.

It’s not entirely surprising that Sharma has taken this approach. He did something very similar with his bestsellin­g book The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari, a step-by-step guide to living with “greater courage,

balance, abundance and joy” told via the fable of a lawyer battling to make sense of an unharmonio­us life.

As the top Google question on that book asks: Is The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari

fiction? The answer is yes … of a sort. His characters go on clunky “journeys” to enlightenm­ent and Sharma repeats the format 21 years later, with hilariousl­y bad dialogue, which is just the start of the problems with this “inspiratio­nal fiction”. Almost every page has an exchange like this:

“Amazing insights,” the entreprene­ur acknowledg­ed. “But how exactly do I do this during my Victory Hour from 5 to 6am?”

“You’ll learn how to implement The 5am Method in the near future,” the billionair­e replied. “You two cats are becoming open enough and strong enough to embrace the 20/20/20 Formula soon …”

Why Sharma takes this approach is perplexing. No matter how valuable his thoughts and insights are – and there’s some really good stuff here on defending yourself against digital distractio­n, the neuroscien­ce behind daily exercise and the small yet fun steps to increasing productivi­ty and, ultimately, happiness – hiding them behind completely unrealisti­c characters and dreadful storytelli­ng seems completely bizarre.

It is true that people around the world have loved listening to Sharma talk about The 5am

Club over the past 20 years. Apparently he has been handcrafti­ng this tie-in book over a “rigorous four-year period”, so I wonder if he has actually overthough­t what he wanted it to achieve.

Earlier this year, Allan Jenkins wrote Morning, a really lovely diary of waking up early, which throws Sharma’s approach into sharp relief. Mixing philosophy, anecdote and reflection­s from other early risers – writers, actors, artists and fishermen– Jenkin’s book might be slighter and less bombastic than Sharma’s, but it certainly won’t sell as much. Its quietness matches the subject matter, though, and the beautiful writing (“dawn is an enchanted world behind a hidden door”) steadily makes it just as persuasive an argument for seizing the day as The 5am Club.

But then, Morning doesn’t have a linked app called The 5am Habit Installer, or a meditation programme that encourages you to “optimise your Mindset, purify your Heartset, fortify your Healthset and escalate your Soulset”. If that sentence makes you giggle just a little, then you probably won’t last a chapter of The 5am Club.

It is a book that will test the patience of those who are not wholeheart­edly in the Sharma camp. Rise and shine? The first rule of The 5am Club should be, well, not to write a silly story about it.

The 5am Club published by HarperColl­ins is out now

No matter how valuable his insights … hiding it behind unrealisti­c characters and dreadful storytelli­ng seems bizarre

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