If 30 really is the new 21, then Book of Ages: 30 should relieve the anxiety of thirtysomethings who wonder why they haven’t yet won that Pulitzer. Chock-full of potentially useful facts (on Mars, you’d be just 16!), the thin tome is the first in a series devoted to age-related minutiae (next up: 40). Authors Lockhart Steele and Joshua Albertson (their third co-writer was busy dealing with a “hedgehog situation”) sat down to discuss firearms, virginity, and personal debt.
So, are you guys actually 30?
Lockhart Steele: I turn 30 in January.
Joshua Albertson: I turn 29 in two weeks.
So young! What makes you experts on
30?
L.S.: I think the bottom line is, people should
not trust us. There’s a lot of crazy data out
there in this world.
Such as?
J.A.: Forty-five percent of 30-year-olds own a
firearm.
L.S.: One in 25 women turning 30 is a virgin.
What are your sources? These numbers sound
sketchy.
J.A.: They’re all totally nonsketchy. We
did research on the Internet.
Who was the most successful
30-year-old?
J.A.: On a purely financial level, Bill Gates.
L.S.: Microsoft IPO’d when he was 30.
Creatively, you’ve gotta give some props to
Orson Welles.
What about the average 30-year-old?
L.S.: The average 30-year-old has $19,100 in
debt. I think if you’re doing better than that,
it’s something to feel good about.
Is 30 in New York different?
L.S.: One of the stats is that 30-year-olds are
a pretty content lot. All of my friends in New York
are heading up on 30. I’m not sure content is
the word I’d use.
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