Written by Jack Whitehall, this is a blend of family memoir, travelogue, and advice on how to get through the trauma that are family holidays. It reads like stand up comedy material and is one of the funniest things I have ever read. In the introduction Jack tells us it was originally going to be just him until his parents, Michael and Hilary, muscled their way in, and in my humble opinion, it wouldn't have been half as brilliant without them. I have come across Michael before, on chat shows mainly, and am familiar with his persona, the traditional conservative, whose fantasy dinner party would include Thatcher's cabinet, a diehard Brexit supporter, a product of his generation and class, a show biz agent to the stars, but I knew less about Hilary, here she is a revelation, coming across as truly hilarious, a mother of three children, at the heart of their family.
If you are acquainted with Jack Whitehall, the style and humour of this will feel familiar, with the three unreliable narrators remembering things differently, Jack refers to this book as entering new genre territory, a type of 'Travelogue and Misery Lit'. We are told to approach family holidays with a degree of cynicism, low expectations and if at all possible, not see the family prior to going away, easier if you are at boarding school as a child, and if you have moved home as an adult, whilst airing old family grievances before helps in lessening their impact when they come up on holiday. Michael tells us why mixing business with family holidays is not a good idea as he name drops his way through his anecdotes. I loved his reference to Cuba as Liverpool with cigars! There are the perils of eating abroad, particularly at Michelin starred restaurants and the Chernobyl canteen, and what can get lost in translation as with the term thongs in Australia, whilst Hilary regales us with Scrabblegate on her honeymoon.
In many ways, the crazed conflict ridden Whitehall family dynamics will feel unnervingly familiar to many of us, the family knows us best, inside and out, are aware of all our weaknesses and will never let us forget our mistakes. We may rage at them and take the mick out of them, yes, there are the mental scars, but there is a strong sense of affection and love in the family ties that bind. Nowhere is this made clearer than when Jack relates missing out on the family Christmas festivities in 2020 for obvious reasons, and how hard that hit him. Fans of Jack and his family will love this entertaining and utterly comic and witty read, and I think even those that have never encountered him before will enjoy this too. This is the perfect Christmas present, and I hear the audio is fabulous, with Michael and Hilary relating their parts on it. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.