Taking up where Emily Post and Miss Manners left off, Diane Mapes counsels the dating-distressed on today s new rules of courtship. This smart, savvy etiquette guide addresses both nuts-and-bolts questions (Who asks? Who pays? Who makes the first call? Who brings out the condoms?) as well as the more puzzling aspects of modern romance (Do I really need to tell my new girlfriend that I had her investigated?). Advice, behavioral examples, and dating horror stories are gleaned from a number of sources, including singles, psychologists, scholars, authors, etiquette experts, relationship coaches, and the most well-mannered people on earth, Southern women and gay men. From how to avoid dating a serial killer to what to do at a snuggle party, How to Date provides single men and women, gay and straight, with a step-by-step road map for navigating today s romantic quicksand with humor, grace, and aplomb.
Lynn Harris is author of the comic novel DEATH BY CHICK LIT, along with its prequel, MISS MEDIA, and several non-fiction books including BREAKUP GIRL TO THE RESCUE! She is also co-creator, with Chris Kalb, of the venerable website BreakupGirl.net. An award-winning journalist, she writes frequently for Glamour, Salon.com, the New York Times, the Washington Post, Nerve.com, Babble.com, and many others. She also wrote TabletMag.com's "The Rabbi's Wife" column, from experience. Her essays are included in many anthologies as well. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and young daughter and son."
An easy read. I read some articles of hers in the past and enjoyed her humour. It is not helpful, if that's what you want, but it is enjoyable overall.
This book is very superficial (be sexy and wealthy basically). A lot of the stuff in this book can be true, but it depends on what type of person you want to date/ what your values are. It was informative but is not a follow line-by-line guide. Real people want to date real people, weaknesses and all. This book makes it out to be that people need to be perfect. It is important to strive to be better but not to the extent of being someone/thing that you are not.
This is a very charming (but not particularly helpful) book about the manners to have (and mannerisms to avoid) while dating. It validates those of us who arrive on time, and who have had the awkward experience of telling your first date his fly is open.
The emphasis is on etiquette and charm, less on psychoanalysis or strategy. Having read a million and one dating books, I still found this one had something to contribute. I'd recommend it.
Diane Mapes has a fun column in the Seattle P-I, and I was hoping her dating book would be a fun read. On the whole, it does okay. She mixes her own advice with those of other experts (other dating writers and the grandson of Emily Post), as well as submitted dating success and horror stories. The only wisdom I picked up from the book is that I should talk to strangers more often.