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Paperback The Boys Are Back Book

ISBN: 0307476278

ISBN13: 9780307476272

The Boys Are Back

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Emotionally honest and sharply witty, a story that is at once heartbreaking and wonderfully life-affirming about one man's life as a single parent.

"So there we are, a father and two sons in a household without role models, males together in a home different from anything I'd known--an idyllic Lost Boys' world with a house full of children and as few rules as possible."

When Simon Carr's wife Susie lost her battle to...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Great Book

Powerfully written, poignant and humorous. It hits too close to home, as my wife is battling metastatic breast cancer, but a great book.

charming and insightful memoir

I was thoroughly impressed with Mr Carr's self-insight, candor and literary style. Certainly a flawed fellow, as he's the first to admit, but with more than enough tender honesty to counter whatever parenting missteps he makes. This is not just a nifty little novel...it's actually a very deep, emotional look at what makes a father...a mother...exploring the complicated and wonderful relationships between a parent and a child. It's a breathtaking book. Every parent and/or child should give it a read.

great book--arrived in excellent condition

This is a great book that I had trouble finding in the states, so I was excited when I found a copy here. It arrived in a timely manner in excellent condition, just as the seller promised.

Heartfelt and honest memoir of learning to raise boys as a father rather than as a substitute mother

The Boys Are Back (Movie Tie-in Edition (Vintage) Are fathers the same as mothers? This is the central question that underlies Simon Carr's heartfelt and searingly honest memoir, The Boys Are Back (also made into a motion picture). Carr's answer to this question is a resounding "No!" as he recounts his adventures as a single widowed father of his five-year-old son Alexander. Most of the story takes place after Simon's second wife has died from cancer, and he is left on his own to raise their son. Their family then becomes bigger when his eleven-year-old son Hugo from his previous marriage comes to live with them as well. The challenges of being a single father become further complicated by Simon's bereavement, Alexander's grief over his lost mother, and Hugo's struggles with finding a place in his divorced family. Throughout, Simon drifts back and forth in time to recount his experiences as a father to his sons both in and out of his marriages. Much of The Boys Are Back concerns Carr's take on how to parent as a father rather than as a mother, and it's an issue that he takes head on. His wife was the primary caregiver prior to her death, and after she is gone Simon has to learn how to connect with his son. He discovers that he has to do so as Alexander's father instead of as a substitute mother, and that he has to allow his son to be a little boy. In the absence of his wife's influence - and staunchly resisting the well-meaning advice of "mommy culture" that descends on him from other mothers, grandmothers, and the like - Simon develops his own approach to raising a boy. This means lots of physical activity and physical contact. It means setting a few unbreakable ground rules and letting everything else go. It means saying yes whenever possible instead of automatically saying no. It means a house where a boy can dress himself by pulling clothes right off the clothesline, ride his bike inside if he is careful and there's no good reason not to, and play raucous games of King of the Bed with his father. To some extent Carr puts too much emphasis on the differences between men and women, ignoring greater differences in personality (such as between his first and second wives) and the experiences of same-gender couples. Yet he certainly points out many real differences in attitudes and approaches to parenting between mothers and fathers that most people are too polite to talk openly about. And although his ideas about fathering may sound radical or even crazy, they are ultimately affirming of not only fathers and men, but of boys as well. Carr could have easily written a propagandizing, ten-step tome explicating his philosophy. Instead, by sharing his own experiences with warmth and honesty, he makes reading this book feel as comfortable and genuine as chatting and sharing advice with another parent at a playdate or Little League game.
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