Loved this book, any book that makes me laugh out loud is a winner as far as I'm concerned. Dowling describes life as a parent in a fully humorous account including all the mishaps through pets, holidays, school, sports, and the kids leaving home.
I always enjoy Tom Dowling’s writing in The Guardian, so I sought out this book. It’s a collection of his columns so it is probably best read a little at a time, rather than one after another as I did. But I enjoyed it, and it made me laugh. His bit about being “gay-married” to “Sean” hasn’t aged well, but otherwise I liked it a lot.
I’m a big fan of Tim Dowling’s column. It’s one of the first things I read in Saturday’s paper. So as an extension of those columns this was an enjoyable read. Probably one to dip in and out of rather than as a book to read all the way through in one sitting because of the way it’s written but an amusing bit of entertainment.
Funny and to the point. A good easy read that ticks the boxes of being a parent. This was my coffee shop partner for just shy of two weeks, and I’ll miss the many ‘laugh out load’ moments we had. The last few pages are quite touching.
I did snicker a couple of times, the author _can_ be funny. It feels like not that the jokes are not funny, but there are just too few of them. In addition to that, the audiobook narration by the author felt far from the best delivery.
I follow Tim Dowling on a weekly basis in The Guardian and vey much enjoy his whimsical articles. From that starting point this a great little relaxing read, easy to pickup and put down, but not quite as sharp as How not to be a Husband. Lots of light observations, a couple poignant, probably better read episodically than straight through as you become a little immune to the humour.