Henry Alford is screamingly funny. Sometimes.
He cares about manners which is a good thing.
He confuses charm with manners which leads to long digressions and redundant observations.
When I began the book, I thought, oh good, an up to date guide on how to comport oneself online, at the office, with transsexuals, etc. Then as I read on, I thought, Oh, a book for young metrosexuals. Then I groaned, oh no a bunch of loosely connected musings on all sorts of social situations including having online exchanges about your plants. Finally, I realized, this is a book about Henry Alford with a misleading subtitle.
The tip off was the description of a game called "Touch the Waiter." What a rude unfunny way to behave, and how bizarre to trumpet it in your "guide to manners." It is almost a how-to in what not to do to have good manners.
What is especially confusing about this book is that it has an index but no bibliography even though Alford refers to many superior sources such as Miss Manners, Thom Gunn, etc. A bibliography would have redeemed the thing for me. It could also have used table of contents. (Okay, I am a librarian and I like to know where to shelve things. Does this go next to David Sedaris --essay collections-- or next to Letitia Baldridge- etiquette guides?) Is there an editor at that publishing house? Someone who for example might have reduced the number of times Alford writes certain anecdotes or tells unfunny jokes?
So in the end, I fault the publisher more than the author.