Future parents, refrain especially you! This is also valid for already-parents, and even for non-parents. Lorton is a strange guy who has three daughters, one suspects that he loves, and who decided one day to become a father in the home. A family project explosive, in a society where, despite the rhetoric, these ladies continue to exercise a predominant part of parenthood. Obviously Lorton fulfills its task as a man: in addition to changing diapers, choose clothes with taste and multiply the paths to drive small, Monsieur can play the philosopher. This is obviously unfair to say things like that, in jest, but it is fun to see that a man is allowed him to regard parenting as an exceptional phenomenon that deserves to be told. The result is a hilarious story, combined with beautiful and very serious reflections. Never overhanging never moralizing, and always anchored in practice: faced with this or that choice, how have we thought, what have we done that seemed appropriate to the situation, and why did we probably wrong? This book is a modesty contrasts with the majority of works devoted to childhood. It is funny, exciting, moving, and ultimately it restores incredible learning strength of what it can mean "becoming a parent".