LoveReading Says
LoveReading Says
Billy No-Mates must have been a difficult book to title, because although Max Dickins begins his masculinity journey with the realisation that he is struggling to name a best man for his wedding, this book is about so much more than maintaining male friendships. It's nothing short of a forensic exploration of what it is to be a bloke. The combination of high-quality comedic writing layered on top of methodical research with therapists, academics and so on (the appendix notes are 30 pages long) is brilliantly engaging.
Regardless of the expert opinions researched and referenced throughout, no one knows the real Max better than his soon-to-be fiancé Naomi of course, and some of the discourse and dialogue between the pair are the best moments in the book. By the time we get to his proposal (genius!), then wedding and his creative solution to the best man problem, Dickins has taken us on a bit of a roller-coaster covering everything from being a schoolboy, to male banter, to toxic masculinity, and to – a new one for me – ‘emotional labour’ (basically, the effort required to make a relationship work). Note to self...
In addition to the humour, the expertise, the personal memoir and the romantic storyline there is a very serious and timely point to this book – which is how to avoid drifting towards loneliness, a significant contributor to the alarming statistics around male suicide. In his epilogue, Dickins muses whether, after mental and physical health, social health might be the last male taboo for men. Perhaps it is a taboo, or perhaps it’s something men don’t necessarily even think about. Billy No-Mates did a brilliant job of making me do so and gave me a lot of laughs along the way.
Greg Hackett
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Billy No-Mates Synopsis
'Where have all my friends gone?'
When Max Dickins decided to propose to his girlfriend, he realised there was no one he could call on to be his best man. He quickly learned that he wasn't the only man struggling with friendships. For decades, countless studies from across the world have confirmed that men have fewer close friends than women - and the problem gets worse the older men get.
But what goes wrong? And what can men do about it?
Dickins is going to find out. Join Max on his funny and charmingly candid search as he takes a defibrillator to his social life. As he ultimately discovers that if he wants a Best Man, then he needs to be a better man.
About This Edition
ISBN: |
9781838853549 |
Publication date: |
6th July 2023 |
Author: |
Max Dickins |
Publisher: |
Canongate Books |
Format: |
Paperback |
Pagination: |
318 pages |
Primary Genre |
Biographies & Autobiographies
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Other Genres: |
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Recommendations: |
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Press Reviews
Max Dickins Press Reviews
[Max Dickins] couldn't think of anyone to be his best man. It was a realisation that triggered a poignant - and very funny - odyssey - Daily Mail
A funny but deeply uncomfortable read for those men . . . who have allowed their male friendships to wither - Sunday Times
On the spot - Guardian
A funny, meaty, informative read where [Max Dickins] uses himself as a hook to guide us through male friendships - Independent
Very funny, utterly charming and above all, wise, Billy No-Mates is not so much about getting the friendships you deserve, but deserving the friendships you've got -- Tim Dowling
Fascinating -- Jeremy Vine BBC Radio 2
Brilliant . . . one of the most important books I've read this year . . . [it] asks us to put a mirror up to our own friendships -- Ninhal Arthanayake Radio 5 Live
Billy No-Mates should be required reading for all us fellas. I wish I had it 10 years ago. Hilarious, elegantly-written and fascinating. As a life-improving call-to-arms, it's impact on me is hard to overstate. It has - without exaggeration - made me a better friend. And maybe even a better man. As absorbing as it is funny -- Phil Wang
We need a conversation about why men don't have a mate they can talk to - The Times
Here Max exposes something worrying and fundamental but with such a lightness of touch -- Rufus Hound