Dads Maybe Book
By (Author) Tim OBrien
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
16th December 2020
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: writers
Parenting: advice and issues
813.6
Paperback
400
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 25mm
280g
The bestselling author of The Things They Carried and If I Die in a Combat Zone shares wisdom from a life in letters, lessons learned in wartime, and the challenges, humour and rewards of raising two sons.
When Tim OBrien became an older father, he resolved to give his young sons what he wished his own father had given to him a few scraps of paper signed Love, Dad. Maybe a word of advice. Maybe a sentence or two about some long-ago Christmas Eve. Maybe some scattered glimpses of their rapidly ageing father, a man they might never really know. For the next fifteen years, the author talked to his sons on paper, as if they were adults, imagining what they might want to hear from a father who was no longer among the living.
OBrien traverses the great variety of human experience and emotion, moving from soccer games to warfare to risqu lullabies, from alcoholism to magic shows to history lessons to bittersweet bedtime stories, but always returning to a fathers soul-saving love for his sons.
The result is Dads Maybe Book, a funny, tender, wise, and enduring literary achievement that will squeeze the readers heart with joy and recognition.
[A] stirring blend of memoir, letters to his young sons, and meditations on the humbling nature of parenthoodIts a work thats the spiritual inheritor of John Steinbecks Travels With Charley and Kurt Vonneguts A Man Without a Country. [OBrien] takes absolutism to task, finds qualifications for his own pacifism and considers the paradox of a moral society that allows for forever war Time Magazine
O'Brien uses his deft skill of wordplay throughout this latest bookFans of parenting books, memoirs, and stories of Vietnam War veterans will find enjoyment in these heartfelt words Library Journal
Tim OBrien was born in Minnesota and served as a foot soldier in Vietnam from 1969 to 1970, and after graduate studies at Harvard worked as a reporter for the Washington Post. When If I Die in a Combat Zone was published in 1973, it established him as one of the leading American writers of his generation, a status that was confirmed when Going After Cacciato won the National Book Award for fiction.