When I woke up this morning it was with every intention on doing a Sunday Favorites review, however, I felt that the review should be more Dad oriented, in honor of Father’s Day. The problem with this is that none of my favorite books are about dads, and that got me thinking; there must be dad books out there somewhere. So, I asked for suggestions on Twitter (no results yet) and went searching the internet.
Today is a good day to search for Dad stuff, except that most of my searches yielded results of books that dads would like to read, not books about dads. It took me three hours to search the internet and read synopsis and reviews of books and novels touted to be ‘about dad’, and you know what I discovered? All the novels on the subject of dad were depressing, or about how a bad dad affected a kids life, or about adjusting to life without a dad. I didn’t find a single inspirational, uplifting novel about a dad. Clearly this is a subject that needs to be expanded on. Good dads are amazing people and effect the lives of their children in glorious ways, why can’t/don’t people write about that?
If you have a good dad book to recommend, please let me know in the comments, otherwise, here’s a list of non-fiction dad books that you might want to give a try:
Geek Dad by Ken Denmead – My husband is a geek and I have two boys. When I saw the title of this book I immediately thought, “AH! I should have got this for Father’s Day!” Instead, I didn’t know about it and he got World of Warfare 2 for his PS3.
The premise of this book is cool geeky projects that dads can do with their kids. I know that some day my husband wants to work with our boys to put a camera on a rocket, shoot it up real high and take pictures and/or video.
The preview that Amazon.com gives you is for the project is “Ice Cubes Fit for a Geek” (How to make Lego ice cubes), and the book’s Amazon page also lists “Fly a night-time kite ablaze with lights or launch a video camera with balloons”, “Construct the “Best Slip n’ Slide Ever,” “Build a working lamp with LEGO bricks and CDs”, “Create a customized comic strip or your own board game”, “Transform any room into a spaceship” and “Make geeky crafts like cyborg jack-o’-lanterns or Ethernet cuff links” as other projects. Maybe not as advanced as my husband’s rocket/camera idea, but fun sounding, nonetheless.
The Council of Dads: My Daughters, My Illness, and the Men Who Could Be Me by Bruce Feiler
- This is the true story of a man who is diagnosed with cancer and how he deals with the idea of of leaving his daughters without a dad, by asking his six close friends to help raise them. This book is the author’s journey as he is diagnosed with and battles cancer, and his mission to find friends who will help raise his daughters and teach them all he feels they need to be taught about the world.
There is a brief interview with the author on Amazon’s book page that answer a lot of the burning questions one gets on reading the book about his inspiration, friends and the council they create. This would be a great gift to pass onto any family member who is struggling with a cancer diagnosis and how to prepare their children.
Shit my dad says by Justin Halpin - I decided to add this to my book list because I follow it on Twitter and it’s always good for a chuckle. The Twitter page started a phenomenon that has branched out into the Novel and TV show.
Readers can expect tidbits such as “Engagement rings are pointless. Indians gave cows…Oh sorry, congrats on proposing. We good now? Can I finish my indian story?” (June 17′s tweet). While I haven’t read the novel, if it’s anywhere as funny and straightforward as 140 characters can be, then it’ll be worth the read.
For The Dad Who’s Best At Everything (The Dads’ Book) – The title
of this book appeals to me because this IS my dad. My dad is a Renaissance man/dad – he can build anything with wood, to basements, to decks, to wooden boxes to decoy ducks. He’s an electrician, a guitar player, a baseball coach, a biker, a horseback rider. So I’ve also wondered, what do you get the dad who’s best at everything?
This book doesn’t give you what you expect, but it’s still good for dads. The problems is that the title is misleading; it should be ‘for the dad who WANTS to be best at everything’. Included in this book is practical advice from other dads, on a ton of different subjects, from how to change diapers to how to make bows and arrows.
Punk Rock Dad: No Rules just Real Life by Jim Lindberg - This book was actually recommended to me to add to this list, by my husband, who is a long time fan of the Punk group Pennywise. The author of this book, Jim Lindberg, is the lead vocalist and guitarist for Pennywise, and this book is the story of what it’s like to be both a dad and a famous musician, and how it is to combine the two lifestyles.
It sounds like an intriguing read. The Publishers Weekly review on the Amazon page, writes how it is a mix of memoir and parenting manual. The author shares his views and challenges of raising well adjusted children, while remaining true to his non-conformist, Punk Rock heart.