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{read online} Dad's Maybe Book DOWNLOAD{read online} Dad'sMaybe BookDOWNLOADDescription“If this does, in fact, prove to be the last thing he writes, it is a touching conclusion to aliterary career that has left us with a shelf of enduring novels, memoirs and short stories. Mr. Oâ€Brien, like Hemingway, didnâ€t necessarily write about war as much as somethinglarger: our shared humanity.―— Wall Street Journal “[A] stirring blend of memoir,letters to his young sons, and meditations on the humbling nature of parenthood . . .ÂItâ€s a work thatâ€s the spiritual inheritor of John Steinbeckâ€s Travels With Charley andKurt Vonnegutâ€s A Man Without a Country. Like those, Dadâ€s Maybe Book dwells onthe state of America and American life. He takes absolutism to task, finds qualifications for his ownpacifism and considers the paradox of a moral society that allows for forever war.― —TIMEMagazine“Brilliant . . . To say the book is about ‘fatherhood†is akin to saying thatCatch-22  is about World War II.― —VVA Veteran (Vietnam Veterans of America) 'Thismoving, heart-wrenching book, so raw in the best of all senses, will make you weep after exultingin lifeâ€s energies and 'maybes.' It is genuinely human at every level.'— Providence Journal“Tim Oâ€Brien is back in top form… Rather than as a war writer, Oâ€Brien might alsoobject to being thought of as a spiritual writer, the way one thinks of Camus, Hemingway, orTolstoy. But there he is. One of the essentials.― — DeWitt Henry,Woven Tale Press “A bountiful treasury of fatherly advice, memoir, literary criticism, history, politicalcommentary, and a dash of magic and miracles…There are smiles and tears awaiting the readeron every page of this often emotionally charged book, and enough wisdom in it about what itmeans to be a parent, and a decent human being, to fuel many hours of personal recollection andreflection.―— BookReporter  “A gorgeous book, a love letter and legacy.― —Psychology Todayâ€s “One True Thing― blog  “This loving gift to[Oâ€Brienâ€s] now-teenage sons is sprinkled with literary criticism, writing tips, thoughts onhis relationship with his father and philosophy on aging and mortality…Tender and hilarious.―— Minneapolis Star Tribune '[O'Brien] poignantly captures the trials of parenthood...Interspersed throughout are memoiristic chapters sharing his fears and political awakening duringhis military service in Vietnam and passionately articulating his antiwar beliefs. Like most dads,O'Brien carries the hopes, fears, and dreams of his children in his own heart.' -- Booklist “A warm account of life as an older dad with two growing sons.― — Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel  “A collection of—among other things—briefly noted moments that would havemost likely been forgotten: letters from a father to his sons, detailed chapters about a Purple Heartrecipientâ€s experiences in Vietnam and Oâ€Brienâ€s fondness for Ernest