Hey, who needs a book to tell them what a Groom needs to do on his Wedding
Day? All you do is turn up, say the vows, and the Bride will have sorted
the rest, right?
WRONG!
Unless you want your Fiancé to be stressed out at you for the year(s!) it
take to plan and organise a Wedding, you better get involved NOW!
The
Modern Groom needs to know all the ins and outs of Wedding Planning, and
everything that he is traditionally responsible for.
Scroll down to take a look at our hand-picked selection of Wedding Books
for Grooms, and guarantee yourself the best day of your life.
Groom Wedding Books
Wedding Book Details
Price
The Pocket Idiot's Guide to Being a
Groom (Pocket Idiot's Guide)
by Jennifer Lata Rung, Mark Rung
This new edition includes everything the
nervous husband-to-be needs to know, from the proposal to the honeymoon,
with specific advice on choosing the best man, budgeting for the wedding,
selecting formalwear, and more!
Includes updated coverage of honeymoon destinations and alternative
weddings.
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The Clueless Groom's Guide : More Than
Any Man Should Ever Know About Getting Married
by Peter van Dijk
Congratulations on your engagement, my
clueless friend, and welcome to a world for which you are sadly ill
equipped. You have entered a new dimension. A dimension of china patterns,
ice swans, and boutonnieres. You're planning a wedding, and your fianceé
expects more from you than a diamond ring and a blood test. So, you'd better
get up to speed--and fast.
From the best proposal to the coolest honeymoon, The Clueless Groom's Guide
offers light-hearted commiseration, guidance, and a distinctly male take on
the entire process of planning a traditional wedding. It gives you a sorely
needed chuckle and some surprisingly useful advice to help you get through
the many decisions your bride-to-be will pretend to want your opinion on,
including:
How and where to pop the question--and when to cue the mariachi band
Why engagements of over two years are justified only by extended commitments
to the armed forces and/or unusually long jail sentences
How to pick groomsmen gifts and groomsmen who almost deserve them
Reception sites that offer style and originality . . . and why you should
avoid them like the plague.
And far more than you should ever rightly know about weddings
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Esquire's Things a Man Should Know About
Marriage: A Groom's Guide to the Wedding and Beyond
So it's come to this, then. You've found
somebody willing to spend a lifetime with you. Outstanding. Congratulations.
But wait. Long before any such blissful celebration can be realized, before
that short march that precedes the long, felicitous journey of a life well
shared, there is much to do, and more to learn. Legions of friends and
relatives must be assembled. Hundreds of choices made. Thousands of dollars
procured and haemorrhaged. Do you, sir, have any idea how to select a ring?
How much to pay for it? The rules governing tuxedoes? The proper way to
dissuade her from the tedious practice of using a hyphenated last name? Are
you aware that a wedding is tantamount to the elevation of your bride to
deity for a day, while you remain decidedly a supporting actor? Fear not-at
least, not much. For in this succinct volume, we bring to bear the
experience of the thousands of men who have trod the marital road before
you. We build on some traditions, tear down others, and present advice and
lore that will gird you with the knowledge necessary to orchestrate the
greatest day in your (and her) life. Perhaps more important, we impart
practical advice, extending to the honeymoon and beyond, on living as a
couple. It is sage counsel, and we trust it will help you celebrate this
institution as one that you, indeed, can't disparage. At least, not too
often. As the old Armenian toast goes, "May you grow old on one pillow."
Sample advice:
It's all right to be scared.
It's not all right to soil your tuxedo.
Some women may believe expensive diamond rings are silly and excessive.
We've not met one.
She has no right to know what will happen at the bachelor party.
You'll be better off if you pretend convincingly to care about the selection
of china pattern for the registry.
About the seating chart: employ sadistic pairings judiciously.
Design your own wedding rings? Sure. If you're a wedding-ring designer.
Drinking guidelines for the groom: one drink for every two glasses of water.
On the honeymoon: relax, enjoy everything, roll with problems, don't sweat
small things.
And don't argue on hotel balconies. Just don't.