I hate Mumsnet. The thought of it makes me clench my entire bottom with anxiety. I think it truly suffers from the biggest blight of the online socials - the anonymity - that helps us forget we are talking to, and about, actual human beings.
So when this book landed on my desk at work, I had to have a peep... Is it as bad as the website has become?
In short: no, it's not, and I was perhaps a little daft to think so. After all, books have a range of resources that the average keyboard warrior does not. The tone is a lot kinder, the references from the Mumsnet community are well-chosen, and the points of each mini-chapter (set out like a collection of blog posts or short articles) are persuasive rather than commandeering.
There were a few sentiments I didn't agree with - I appreciate that the tone of the book is for Mums (and other parents/carers) not to bend over backwards to meet their child/ren's every whim and expectation - but I don't approve of the self-deprecation some parenting blogs subscribe to, as I think it can accidentally promote unawareness of one's mental wellbeing. Luckily there isn't much mention of those practices in this book.
Worth a read - just don't visit the website!?