The new one Painfully true stories from a reluctant dad

Mike Birbiglia

Book - 2020

"Mike Birbiglia never wanted to be a father. In fact, there are seven very specific reasons he never wanted a kid, including his aversion to sticky surfaces and his less-than-ideal genes: he's had Lyme Disease, a bladder tumor, diabetes, and dangerous sleepwalking, to name a few. Not to mention the fact that Mike generally doesn't think people (including himself) are really all that great. Then Mike's wife, poet Jen Hope Stein, becomes infected with the contagion 'baby fever' and convinces him she'll do all of the parenting and that their lives don't have to change because of future baby Oona. Yes, he bought that line. In a hilarious memoir about the trials and tribulations of parenting, Mike Birbigli...a shares anecdotes all parents can relate to, including laugh-out-loud observations on the lead up to being a parent, the birth of the baby, and the very messy aftermath of bringing this new one home...for a forever stay! Borne out of and based on his Broadway show The New One, and entirely expanded upon with at least 50% new material for this book, new dad Birbiglia will have you crying from laughter and smiling with joy as he falls in love with baby Oona, despite how smelly she is! Mike's candid thoughts on his reluctance about becoming a dad, what he describes as being the 'pudgy milkless vice president of his family,' laced with Stein's poetry combine to form a heartfelt and hilarious book"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Grand Central Publishing 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Mike Birbiglia (author)
Other Authors
J. Hope (Jen Hope) Stein (author)
Edition
First Edition
Physical Description
viii, 242 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781538701515
  • The book starts here
  • Zombie kid-pocalypse
  • Seven reasons. I love my marriage ; My body is a lemon ; I don't know anything ; I have a cat ; I have a job ; There shouldn't be children anymore ; People aren't great
  • Vows
  • It's happening. Relentless ; Flat soda ; We got a win! ; Bomb jokes ; The poo doesn't smell ; Clean forks ; Bleeding ; Danger zone ; Daddymoon ; Baby's eyes ; Sympathetic eating ; Natural history
  • Monkey arrives. A reality-bending experience ; A renewal of vows ; A sleepwalker and an insomniac walk into a bed ; Hiccuptown ; We wub you ; Dating my wife ; My side of the story
  • Pretending
  • Monkey won't sleep. There's no me in we ; Friendly advice from other parents ; Sex maybe ; Great job ; Trying ; The legs don't reach the floor ; It is what it is
  • Me and my wife on a plane that's crashing
  • Can I have this house when you die?
  • So we don't cry
  • 525,600 photos
  • Natural causes. Sugar fries ; Organic toxic waste ; YMCA ; Slice of life
  • The new one. We learn to dance ; The flu ; The eighth reason ; Coutz
  • Oonadad
  • The book ends here.
Review by Booklist Review

Before they got married, comedian Birbiglia (Sleepwalk with Me and Other Painfully True Stories, 2010) and poet Stein didn't think they wanted kids. Somewhere along the line, though, feelings changed and they found themselves parents to baby Oona. Spurred by the "jealousy" prompt for a storytelling event, the couple shared their private writing about parenthood with one another, beginning the collaboration that evolved into a Broadway play, then a Netflix special, and now this book. While there are plenty of laughs here, the subtitle isn't hyperbole: Birbiglia, whose essay-chapters make up the bulk of the book, gets into some deep and dark stuff as he adjusts to parenthood, often feeling like a third wheel: "It's almost like I didn't know what nothing meant until I became a dad and then I realized, Oh, that's what nothing is." Sweet poems from Stein add levity and joy, too. Sex, sympathy weight, and Birbiglia's sleep disorder are all fair game in this hilariously, sometimes shockingly, and always refreshingly honest look at having a kid and becoming new one's self.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Comedian Birbiglia (Sleepwalk with Me) reflects on fatherhood in this fast-paced memoir, which also features his wife Stein's brief, intimate poems. In 2016, 40-year-old Birbiglia was happily married and happily childless: "I've lost a lot of great friends to kids," he notes. Then, Stein (Little Astronaut) tells him that she wanted to abandon their vow of childlessness; desperate to change her mind, he cites his dangerous sleepwalking disorder, high cholesterol, and a teenage bout with cancer as proof he's "a walking pre-existing condition," but his wife won him over. Stein develops complications during her pregnancy (she writes of her unborn daughter, "my body may fail you,/ (sorry)"), while the expectant father engages in "sympathy eating." ("I'm so sorry you're having cramps--are you gonna finish those fries?" writes Birbiglia). In the months after daughter Oona's birth, Birbiglia grows fearful that he may never connect with his "little monkey," yet soon enough he wins small victories, like receiving "record-high approval ratings" from Oona for his rendition of "Ave Maria." The turning point comes when he plays hide and seek with her in a furniture showroom, and she begins "laughing so hard that I start laughing in a new way... We're laughing as one." Birbiglia's witty take on new parenthood will resonate especially with those who've been there. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Comedian Birbiglia knocks it out of the ballpark with his second collection of humorous essays and insights. After his first volume discussing his hilariously terrifying sleepwalking troubles (Sleepwalk with Me), he's graduated to a scarier topic: parenthood. His latest chronicles the journey Birbiglia and his wife, Jennifer Hope Stein, take, from denial that they'll ever want kids of their own, grim acceptance when his wife decides that she actually does want a baby, to creating an entirely new lifestyle subject to their child Oona's needs. Peppered throughout are Stein's poems about their daughter, their marriage, their fears, and their love. The poems complement her husband's insights and help balance the story of their forays into parenthood. The anecdotes are poignant, moving, and humorous. Fantastically narrated by both the authors, this is a book that all parents will easily relate to and laugh along with. VERDICT This highly entertaining and engaging listen is ideal for library collections and would make a great gift for new (and old!) parents and comedy fans.--Erin Cataldi, Johnson Cty. P.L., Franklin, IN

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Self-deprecating reflections on the peaks and valleys of modern fatherhood. Comedian Birbiglia and his wife, Stein, parlay their individual creative talents into a funny and wise memoir on parenting. Fusing good humor and raw honesty with selections from Stein's evocative poetry, Birbiglia narrates his journey into parenting using material previously adapted for the Broadway stage. From the outset, the author admits to having "a low tolerance for children because I've lost a lot of great friends to kids." He was up front about that fact since he and wife Stein got married in 2008, but when she casually mentioned that having children would "be different" for them, Birbiglia knew he was in store for some major changes. Though he outlines seven reasons for his reluctance about becoming a father--e.g., overpopulation, cancer history, a lack of great people in the world ("The men we used to think were great were priests, politicians, and gymnastics doctors. It hasn't ended well for great")--Birbiglia eventually warmed to the idea. The couple birthed their daughter, Oona, despite the author's varicocele condition, demanding touring schedules, and Stein's brutally difficult pregnancy. The author ably narrates these hurdles with the serious concern of a devoted husband and the comic timing of a seasoned entertainer. Throughout the book, Stein seamlessly interweaves her artistic verses, tempering all the facetiousness beautifully. Never clinical or overly extreme, Birbiglia's lighthearted, refreshingly droll approach to starting a family will appeal most to readers who can identify with both his reluctance to couple up and his acceptance and embracement of parenting. There are also shared moments of introspection and maturity, not to mention useful wisdom. As Oona moved into toddlerhood, Birbiglia began to accept himself as the "decent dad" he never thought he could become. Hilarious, relatable, cringeworthy, and effortlessly entertaining, particularly for new parents or those in contemplation. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.