Rules For Dating My Daughter
Cartoon Dispatches From the Front-lines of Modern Fatherhood
Description
Mental Floss '30 Most Interesting Comics of 2016' pick
InRules for Dating My Daughter, Mike Dawson uses visual storytelling to offer original, compelling, and funny commentary on fatherhood, gun rights, the gender of toys, and staying sane in a world where school shootings and Disney princesses get equal billing.Rules is the perfect guide to today's vexing mediascape.
Mike Dawsonis the author of three books:Freddie & Me: A Coming-of-Age (Bohemian) Rhapsody,Troop 142, andAngie Bongiolatti. Mike is the host ofTCJ Talkiesand the Book Clubpodcast atThe Comics Journal. He lives in Fair Haven, New Jersey, with his wife and two children.
About this Author
Currently Mike is the host of TCJ Talkies, Book Club podcast at The Comics Journal, where cartoonists come on to discuss graphic novels they've read.
He lives in Fair Haven, New Jersey with his wife and two children.
Reviews
"Mike Dawson's crisp and clever art is particularly good at illuminating abstract concepts and bringing them to life. [...] This flair for finding the surprising, perfect visual metaphor makes his new collectionRules for Dating My Daughter not just a thoughtful book but one that's a pleasure to read."--Dan Kois,Slate
"Dawson seems to be trying something genuinely difficult in his work: to portray [...] well-rounded, rational decency, a goal not often earnestly attempted in comics, much less achieved. This is straight-up sincere-and-sensitive suburban-dad stuff, but not unconsciously (or unashamedly) so."--The Comics Journal
"If he sometimes seems helpless against the universe, Dawson still channels the parental zeitgeist, as shown in his suggestion that the one good choice is to raise thoughtful children who understand reality."--Publishers Weekly
"Dawson pours his own parental love and insecurity into smart, funny and creative comic essays about subjects like feminist dads, talking to your kids about how we get our meat, school shootings, and the class values of the Disney Jr. showSofia the First."--Mental Floss
"There is nothing worse than a parenting book in which the writer presents themselves as a perfect parent with all the right answers. Mike Dawson doesn't pretend. Raising kids in the modern world comes with more social, political and religious complications than it did in decades past, and Mike is just as confused and anxious about them as every parent is, or should be. The struggle makes for an entertaining and heartfelt read. This book isn't just for parents, it's for anyone who wants to ponder the influence our world has on youth, and frankly, that should be everyone."--Julia Wertz,New Yorker cartoonist and author ofThe Infinite Wait andMuseum of Mistakes
"Mike Dawson's crisp and clever art is particularly good at illuminating abstract concepts and bringing them to life. [...] This flair for finding the surprising, perfect visual metaphor makes his new collectionRules for Dating My Daughter not just a thoughtful book but one that's a pleasure to read."--Dan Kois,Slate
"Dawson seems to be trying something genuinely difficult in his work: to portray [...] well-rounded, rational decency, a goal not often earnestly attempted in comics, much less achieved. This is straight-up sincere-and-sensitive suburban-dad stuff, but not unconsciously (or unashamedly) so."--The Comics Journal
"If he sometimes seems helpless against the universe, Dawson still channels the parental zeitgeist, as shown in his suggestion that the one good choice is to raise thoughtful children who understand reality."--Publishers Weekly
"Dawson pours his own parental love and insecurity into smart, funny and creative comic essays about subjects like feminist dads, talking to your kids about how we get our meat, school shootings, and the class values of the Disney Jr. showSofia the First."--Mental Floss
"There is nothing worse than a parenting book in which the writer presents themselves as a perfect parent with all the right answers. Mike Dawson doesn't pretend. Raising kids in the modern world comes with more social, political and religious complications than it did in decades past, and Mike is just as confused and anxious about them as every parent is, or should be. The struggle makes for an entertaining and heartfelt read. This book isn't just for parents, it's for anyone who wants toponder the influence our world has on youth, and frankly, that should be everyone."--Julia Wertz,New Yorker cartoonist and author ofThe Infinite Wait andMuseum of Mistakes
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