Never Kiss a Man in a Canoe is a fascinating glimpse into our social past and harks back to a time when agony aunts played a pivotal role in society, advising men and women on love, sex, relationships and other taboo subjects. From advice on the immorality of reading a crime novel or riding a bicycle to Sunday school, to tips on beauty, etiquette and how to make a boy into a man, this wonderful book is a slap in the face for everyone accustomed to the politically correct advice of today, and is a tribute to the manners of the past that will make you grateful times have moved on.As recommended by Stephen Fry on the BBC’s QI.Named as one of the best humour books of the year by the Sunday Telegraph and Daily Mail. As seen in the Sunday Times, The Guardian, The Sunday Telegraph, The Daily Mail, The Independent on Sunday, The Daily Express, The Week. REVIEWS ‘A terrific anthology of the sometimes eccentric, sometimes priggish, sometimes witty advice offered by agony aunts’Sam Leith, The Daily Mail.‘Good for a hoot on a girls' night out’ Oliver Pritchett, The Sunday Telegraph ‘A fascinating history of anxieties. Hilarious advice from days gone by.’The Daily Mirror‘Fascinating….excellent good sense that speaks across the years’The Sunday Times‘A reminder of how little has really changed. Tanith Carey's Never Kiss a Girl in a Canoe offers much that is still relevant to today's girl-about-town.'Independent on Sunday ‘This compendium is more than an amusing curiosity; it vividly charts the long slow process of social change over the period of a century.’Rebecca McQuillan, The Glasgow HeraldAbout the AuthorTanith Carey first became fascinated by the curious world of agony aunts when she was working as Woman's Editor for the Daily Mirror alongside the late great Marjorie Proops.Tanith now writes for a huge range of publications around the world, ranging from The Guardian to Grazia and the Daily Telegraph.
The perfect little palette cleanser! I heard Stephen Fry talk about this book on Qi and couldn’t resist the title..... Hilarious but also really kind of a fascinating look at 19th and early 20th century society and it’s ever changing ideas of what behavior is acceptable.... laughed a lot and read so many of the letter responses out loud to the hubby to make him giggle... lots of fun 💕
This was a fun source book for me, since my current heroine is an agony aunt. I read through it quickly because it was research, but I'd say it was more the kind of book you'd want to dip in and out of. I particularly liked that the letters within each topic were arranged chronologically, to highlight the way advice changes over time. Agony aunts could be tough cookies!
This was good fun. It's Tanith Carey's selection which may well not be representative, but agony aunts and uncles from the mid-19th century to the early 60s show themselves quite a refreshing bunch who could be as empathic as they could be brisk, although I'd beware of their medical advice. They also have a jolly good sense of humour (I especially enjoyed the response to someone who wanted to know at what age you should stop climbing trees) The small section on parenting small children is markedly more ghastly (although they seemed to know what an important time for brain development infancy is)
Incidentally, the canoe caution doesn't mention kissing...