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How it Works: The Husband

di Jason Hazeley

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The handy guide to the HUSBAND makes the PERFECT GIFT for any long-suffering wife or prospective bride to give to their beloved husband. ____________________ 'The wife likes to read romantic fiction. The books are a fantasy and an escape for her. The husband does not waste his time on silly stories. He likes to read books about things that really happened and tales of real men. Reading these will be invaluable if he ever has to land on the moon or be in the S.A.S. or help manage the England football team.' ____________________ 'The husband likes to do simple repairs, like changing the washer on a tap. Afterwards he likes to talk at great length about what a struggle it was, and will want to be treated as if he has invented a machine that turns farts into gold.' ____________________ This delightful book is the latest in the series of Ladybird books which have been specially planned to help grown-ups with the world about them. The large clear script, the careful choice of words, the frequent repetition and the thoughtful matching of text with pictures all enable grown-ups to think they have taught themselves to cope. Featuring original Ladybird artwork alongside brilliantly funny, brand new text. 'Hilarious' Stylist… (altro)
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Note: I received a digital review copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.
  fernandie | Sep 15, 2022 |
My guess is that this book is designed for anyone who is not a husband -- the wife, the fiancée, the boy in need of a role model, extraterrestrial visitors and the like -- but, speaking as a husband, I found much to enlighten me within these pages. Like many practical manuals it describes the subject's strengths and weaknesses, gives insights into his interior workings and pictures him at work and play, following lone pursuits and attempting to socialise. What it doesn't do, however, is to suggest ways to improve or maintain the husband; quite the opposite -- in its otherwise comprehensive thoroughness it seems to implicitly advise a take-it-or-leave-it approach. It's a rather fatalistic and bleak picture that's painted.

This is one of the original series of "Ladybird books for grown-ups" which have graced bookshop displays for a couple of years now, especially at Christmas. With titles like The Ladybird Book of the Mid-Life Crisis, The Ladybird Book of Mindfulness and The Ladybird Book of the Hipster they took original illustrations from mid-20th-century Ladybird Books for children and fitted them to new themes, to which they've added a world-weary commentary. All in simple language. For simple adult minds. A typical example is

"The husband has a very big memory. He can remember football scores, all his old car number plates, and most of the film Withnail & I. But he cannot remember what his wife asked him to bring back from the shops ..."

This is illustrated with a kilted first footer at Hogmanay triumphantly bearing, as he comes through the front door, an unpleasant-looking object (a lump of coal, I assume, but it looks suspiciously like a dog's visiting card). He's clearly forgotten to take the shopping list with him.

There are many kinds of humour that aim to tickle the funny bone. Much of it is aggressive, such as is common with political satire, or when some laugh at pratfalls or when certain comics pick on others because of difference. Wit -- such as puns, riddles and other wordplay -- is similarly cruel in that it involves acute dislocations in expectations, though it's rarely directed personally (sample: "My uncle had to give up tap dancing -- he kept falling in the sink.") Observational humour can be more gentle despite being as exaggerated as the more aggressive humour. It usually features self-deprecation -- in which we laugh at ourselves, at our habits, our foibles, our idiosyncrasies -- rather than those seen to be outsiders or belonging to out-groups.

Much of the humour in these Ladybird books for grown-ups is essentially observational. "The husband hears as much as 30% of what is said to him," is typical. Or take Jim, who after thirty-one years of marriage still doesn't know what his wife Rebecca likes for Christmas and continues to get her the same present every year (in this case, a clutch bag). And again: "Glyn explains himself very badly. This is so he can say he is misunderstood."

You either find this kind of thing achingly funny or absolutely cringeworthy. In short bursts it amuses, but repeated familiarity can render it tedious. The only way to decide is to sample it yourself. Myself, I enjoyed the small print more: Jason Hazeley's N.S.F.W. qualification could stand for Not Suitable for Wife, Joel Morris O.M.G. doesn't necessarily have some obscure honorific title, while 'the publishers' (clearly the writers themselves) claim they are the authors of the unlikely title Eat Yourself Fat. 'The Publishers' also acknowledge assistance from the Executive Secretary of the British Society of Husbands, Sir Penius Wroughshod, and the book is Printed in England; if wet, Italy.

Is it worth a perusal, let alone a purchase? I'll leave you to be the judge. ( )
1 vota ed.pendragon | Jun 22, 2017 |
The Husband as sitcom dad

This Fireside Grown-up Guide to the Husband is one of a series of four this fall. It takes the time-worn clichés about men and adds a painting of an early 1960s English tableau to illustrate it. The cognitive dissonance is laughable, which is the point. Men have not, in general, changed. Hazely and Morris (and their cast of artists) score point after point with pinpoint accuracy.

Every page has a little situational joke and a painting. It is a delight. My favorite: Emma has lots of outfits. Graham has one suit. It is called His Suit, and he has had it for a long time. Graham likes His Suit, even though it has not fit inn years, has a four inch tear in the seat, and makes him look like a burglar in court.

This is my world.

David Wineberg ( )
  DavidWineberg | Aug 31, 2016 |
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The authors would like to thank the illustrators for the work they have so mercilessly ribbed, and whose glorious craftsmanship was the set-dressing of their childhoods. The inspiration they sparked has never faded.
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The handy guide to the HUSBAND makes the PERFECT GIFT for any long-suffering wife or prospective bride to give to their beloved husband. ____________________ 'The wife likes to read romantic fiction. The books are a fantasy and an escape for her. The husband does not waste his time on silly stories. He likes to read books about things that really happened and tales of real men. Reading these will be invaluable if he ever has to land on the moon or be in the S.A.S. or help manage the England football team.' ____________________ 'The husband likes to do simple repairs, like changing the washer on a tap. Afterwards he likes to talk at great length about what a struggle it was, and will want to be treated as if he has invented a machine that turns farts into gold.' ____________________ This delightful book is the latest in the series of Ladybird books which have been specially planned to help grown-ups with the world about them. The large clear script, the careful choice of words, the frequent repetition and the thoughtful matching of text with pictures all enable grown-ups to think they have taught themselves to cope. Featuring original Ladybird artwork alongside brilliantly funny, brand new text. 'Hilarious' Stylist

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