Home
The King of Nothing Much
Barnes and Noble
The King of Nothing Much
Current price: $12.95


Barnes and Noble
The King of Nothing Much
Current price: $12.95
Size: Paperback
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
"Hilarious, incisive, and uncomfortably familiar."—Jonathan Evison, author of
The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving: A Novel
"Johnson perfectly captures both the ennui and elation of parenthood and the mundanity and magic of marriage . . . I love this little book.”—T. Greenwood, author of
Rust & Stardust
The King of Nothing Much
is a story about parenthood in a time of transition.
Weldon Tines, 41, is a stay-at-home dad who has outlived his usefulness in the role. The twins—Danny and Reese—have just started kindergarten, his older daughter Presley wants nothing to do with him, and his wife Deb makes enough money for the family to live on. Newly rudderless, Weldon struggles to understand his purpose on this earth. Who is it that can tell him who he is?
When Weldon slides gleefully down an inflatable slide at a child’s birthday party, only to come crashing into the birthday boy, he thinks he’s just made a mistake that will lead only to hassle and headache. Instead, it kick-starts a quest for personal discovery that culminates in a dramatic flourishing of Weldon’s deep-seated heroism.
Witty and original,
speaks to what it means to be a father and a husband in the age of toxic masculinity.
The Revised Fundamentals of Caregiving: A Novel
"Johnson perfectly captures both the ennui and elation of parenthood and the mundanity and magic of marriage . . . I love this little book.”—T. Greenwood, author of
Rust & Stardust
The King of Nothing Much
is a story about parenthood in a time of transition.
Weldon Tines, 41, is a stay-at-home dad who has outlived his usefulness in the role. The twins—Danny and Reese—have just started kindergarten, his older daughter Presley wants nothing to do with him, and his wife Deb makes enough money for the family to live on. Newly rudderless, Weldon struggles to understand his purpose on this earth. Who is it that can tell him who he is?
When Weldon slides gleefully down an inflatable slide at a child’s birthday party, only to come crashing into the birthday boy, he thinks he’s just made a mistake that will lead only to hassle and headache. Instead, it kick-starts a quest for personal discovery that culminates in a dramatic flourishing of Weldon’s deep-seated heroism.
Witty and original,
speaks to what it means to be a father and a husband in the age of toxic masculinity.