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Parents Behaving Badly

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Parents Behaving Badly is an uproarious, surprising, and poignant satire of American suburbia and youth sports gone wild. Everyone that has ever been involved with youth sports can relate. Kids, coaches, friends, family - everyone knows 'that guy' or 'that mom. The setting is Little League, but the experiences and issues are universal. Layered beneath the book's laugh out loud action are provocative questions about the what ifs of our adolescence, the lost art of personal interaction in the age of texting and Twitter and Facebook, what constitutes infidelity, and blurring the line between fair play and bad sports. Parents Behaving Badly is a good, fun read that will make you laugh, make you think, and make for conversation in bleachers and on sidelines everywhere.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Patrick Lawlor's sardonic tone adds an entertaining dose of edginess to this delightful satire about the perils of parenting and youth sports. With writing that doesn't flinch when talking about condoms, weed, and various forms of infidelity, his enthusiastic reading jumps into the fray without calling attention to his skills or performance. The novel, a fast-moving collection of wickedly funny vignettes, is oddly relaxing. Gummer understands parenting and the conflicts parents face as they simultaneously try to love their children, maintain the illusion of being world-class parents, and curb the irrepressible child within themselves that is never far from the surface. For anyone with children, it's a hilarious, uplifting reminder that we are never more human than when we are parents. T.W. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 24, 2011
      In Gummer's humorous if subdued debut, a suburban Little League serves as the nexus for thwarted ambitions, competitive intrigues, marital rifts, and, as an afterthought, kids who might be interested in baseball. Ben Holden, recently returned to his California hometown from New York, becomes a reluctant coach, grappling with his late father's legacy as a revered high school athletic mentor and the ambivalence that comes with middle-aged parenting and a mature, mostly stable marriage. He's appealing and accessible, as are many of Gummer's cast of family members, friends and neighbors. There's the deftly rendered list of things Ben's sister prizes: "their McMansion in the tony, new and also curiously named CascadeForest development of Sacramento, her Lexus hybrid and his Prius, their Pottery Barn furnishings, her Tory Burch Shoes and matching handbags." But too often, these descriptions substitute for character development and depth, and while the slew of subplots—the most dramatic of which involves low-grade sexual tension between Ben and a sexy ultrasound technician—are entertaining, they can't mask the fact that the novel fails to really deliver on the promise of its title.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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