
(Currently he is describing dropping his shorts and shaving his downstairs!) This is honestly brilliant! If you are free for a couple of hours, get onto Amazon and download the audio book yes the audio book, (makes you feel a little big like a child doesn’t it?) because hearing the stories is absolutely beautiful and if you don’t I promise that you will be missing out. Along with my Pepsi Max, (I really am obsessed) and a packet of ‘crinklys’ (if you have not tried them, they are crinkly salt and vinegar mini cheddars! Genius!) I am looking out of the window of the library window and trying not to laugh. I am currently sat listening to it in the library I must note that I should be adding to my criticism of a philosopher’s theory on the definition of art. I am obsessed with this book and yes this is my first audio book review. Bucatinsky’s soul-baring and honest stories tap into that all-encompassing, and very human, hunger to be a parent – and the life-changing and often ridiculous road to getting there. In Does This Baby Make Me Look Straight? Bucatinsky moves deftly from sidesplitting stories about where kids put their fingers to the realisation that his athletic son might just grow up to be straight and finally to a reflection on losing his own father just as he’s becoming one.

Two and a half years later, the same birth mother – a heroically generous, pack-a-day teen with a passion for Bridezilla marathons and Mountain Dew – delivered a son into the couple’s arms. delivery room, decked out in disposable scrubs from shower cap to booties, to welcome their adopted baby girl – launching their frantic yet memorable adventures into fatherhood.

In 2005, Dan Bucatinsky and his partner, Don Roos, found themselves in an L.A.
