So I am going to be a dad.
When I first found this out I turned towards my ever present helper friends - books. There were many books on becoming a parent and a few of those about becoming a dad. A lot of them had cartoons on the cover. I really don't think I want to find out about the hardest job of my life from a book with cartoons on its cover. I flipped through a few of them and stereotypes smacked me in the face. So, I gave up on dad books pretty early. But I did find one or two parenting books that did a brilliant job.
How did I end up reading this book? Well, friends like to help and a father passed this along to me in the most friendly way. And, of course, I was polite and accepted the loan. I dreaded opening it up. There was no cartoon on the front, but still, it had me worried.
I read it in two hits after a week or so. And you can see my two-star rating. It was OK. It wasn't as bad as what I thought it would be. But there were many cartoons in it and it was 70% full of stereotypes. There is some handy information here, I'd hazard to say more than other dad books. But I have been researching, both other books and online. There was nothing here that a few hours on various and reputable website will inform you of.
But this book does have an audience. It's for those fathers who want one book to read and want a book that's easy to read and like a buddy telling you all these tips. It's very anecdotal. I'm very academic. It wasn't a good fit for me. It is great that it is an Australian author for an Australian market, so a lot of the medical references actually mean something. And the author is a genuinely nice person, but a little old-fashioned. He's all for being a modern hands-on dad, up-to-date with the late 90s early 2000s. There's a smattering of decent advice on dealing with social media, but other than that it feels at least 10-15 years old.
Now with all those criticisms, I seem mean. Decent book, wrong audience.