This book defies easy categorization. In it, Dowling, who writes a popular column for the British newspaper
The Guardian, has collected his scattered musings on the role of the human male in modern marriage and molded them into something akin to a memoir. But because the author has chosen to hew roughly to the conventions of a self-help book to cement the mosaic together, the material is long on his personal philosophies and short on narrative. Dowling's humor is dry, self-deprecating, and ironic in the extreme, and his vignettes are absent entirely of warm, fuzzy moments. Unfortunately, his style at times demands patience from the reader; he has a penchant for explaining his tongue-in-cheek theories at a length that borders on tedious. Despite this tendency, Dowling's deadpan delivery, arresting metaphors, and blunt dissection of events for which a more reverential tone is usually held (e.g., marriage proposals, childbirth) are truly funny.
VERDICT This title will appeal to middle-aged men who possess a strong sense of irony, and to their partners and wives. It combines prescient and inarguably masculine insights on matrimony with tips that—although intended to be comical—are quite practical (see "The Beginner's Essential DIY Tool Cupboard"). Readers who tolerate (or enjoy) the author's wordiness will be rewarded with a fair measure of knowing chuckles and the occasional, actual laugh; those who've yet to cohabit or reproduce may even learn something. [See Prepub Alert, 8/4/14.]
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