Distributed for Bodleian Library Publishing
How to be a Good Mother-in-Law
Originally published in the 1930s, How to be a Good Mother-in-Law offers advice that ranges from the amusingly old-fashioned to the surprisingly still relevant today. Among the topics discussed are how not to behave on your son or daughter’s wedding day, how to visit the couple in their new home, how to interact with the grandchildren, and what degree of independence should be granted to married sons. For mothers-in-law considering living with the married couple, a chapter presents suggestions for how to negotiate this famously fraught situation. In another chapter called “Are They as Bad as They are Painted?,” the book reproduces a selection of tabloid tragedies, including the story of a mother-in-law that surprised a hapless couple by accompanying them on their honeymoon.
Whether you’re a new mother-in-law, a veteran to this much-maligned role, or a long-suffering spouse whose partner’s parent seems impossible to please—the pithy advice on-hand in How to be a Good Mother-in-Law will be warmly welcomed.
Table of Contents
I A Searchlight on Mothers-In-Law
II The Early Days
III How Mothers-In-Law Can Make Things Difficult
IV Wait!
V Causing Trouble
VI A Question of Dignity
VII Visiting a Married Daughter
VIII About Married Sons
IX The Grandchildren
X Living with your Mother-In-Law
XI Food for Thought
XII The Wedding Plans
XIII The Right Sort of Mother-In-Law
XIV To The Reader
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