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The Dundurn Group Paperback English

Will Power

The Most Baffling Bequests, Ludicrous Last Wishes, and Daft Declarations in Final Testaments

By Susan Goldenberg

Regular price £18.99
Unit price
per

The Dundurn Group Paperback English

Will Power

The Most Baffling Bequests, Ludicrous Last Wishes, and Daft Declarations in Final Testaments

By Susan Goldenberg

Regular price £18.99
Unit price
per
 
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  • The most astonishing and extraordinary bequests and last requests found in people's wills. “This will is uncommon and capricious.” These words actually began a will, which shows that our final words needn’t be standard legalese but instead creatively individualistic. Will Power tells the riveting stories of big names and “ordinary people” who did just this. There are eccentric wills, in which a mansion and its grounds are inherited by a parrot. Developers could do nothing until it died — and parrots have long lives. There are cautionary tales of family conflict, including the one-page will fought over for two decades by three generations. Want to write a parting shot? Read about the will that mocked the beneficiaries, such as the bequest that said “for my sister because she is married to a minister who (God help him) she hen pecks.” Or the contested will that ordered the deceased’s horses to be killed by a police firing squad; the bigoted will that bequeathed everything to a neo-Nazi organization; and the will that left far more money to sons than daughters, sparking a landmark gender discrimination case. These stories and many more will amuse, entertain, and inform — for your consideration when you write or revise your will.
The most astonishing and extraordinary bequests and last requests found in people's wills. “This will is uncommon and capricious.” These words actually began a will, which shows that our final words needn’t be standard legalese but instead creatively individualistic. Will Power tells the riveting stories of big names and “ordinary people” who did just this. There are eccentric wills, in which a mansion and its grounds are inherited by a parrot. Developers could do nothing until it died — and parrots have long lives. There are cautionary tales of family conflict, including the one-page will fought over for two decades by three generations. Want to write a parting shot? Read about the will that mocked the beneficiaries, such as the bequest that said “for my sister because she is married to a minister who (God help him) she hen pecks.” Or the contested will that ordered the deceased’s horses to be killed by a police firing squad; the bigoted will that bequeathed everything to a neo-Nazi organization; and the will that left far more money to sons than daughters, sparking a landmark gender discrimination case. These stories and many more will amuse, entertain, and inform — for your consideration when you write or revise your will.