The British Bloke Decoded
By Geoff Norcott
Finally, women, here is all we need to know about The British Bloke, all in a top-notch, humorous book. For those who are those guys, you can take a read and see if you can relate and also enjoy the banter and more… Find out more in the blurb and review as well as a link to the show he has at The Edinburgh Fringe that relates to this book.
First, thanks to Random T. Tours for inviting me to the blog tour and for arranging a copy of the book to be sent to me.

Blurb
If you see a man drinking a pint in an airport pub alone, that’s a bloke.
If you see a man driving to the tip on a Saturday morning with a smile on his face, that’s a bloke.
And if you see a man heading back from the tip and on the way to the pub, that’s a very happy bloke.
The British Bloke appears simple and straightforward. He loves football, cricket, beer and sheds. But beneath that simple exterior lies a mysterious and complex being…
In The British Bloke Decoded, writer, comedian and regular bloke, Geoff Norcott, peels back the layers of blokedom, revealing the truth behind the behaviour of Britain’s husbands, dads, brothers and friends. He dives into the value of banter, the roots of mansplaining, the near impossibility of getting blokes to send birthday cards, and whether there could be a medal system for vacuuming.
Based on 46 years of intensive field research and semi-scientific insights, this book is a celebration of. the simple British bloke in all his splendour.
Review
After many years of research, there’s finally a book that decodes The British Bloke. In quick chapters about the bloke, it gives insight into their perspective on other people, sports, films and the why they are how they are in personality and various foibles.
Geoff Norcott explains it all, the whole developing from a lad to a chap to becoming the guy that then grows further in into becoming The British Bloke, who wants a medal for doing household chores and even for being perhaps a stage further in the fatherhood stakes than their own dad. Then there’s also the man-flu, which is particularly pleasing to have been included, after all that’s what we all need to know, isn’t it? This mysterious flu that happens at a drop of a hat.
Through the facts, there is much humour to be had. It’s a rather fun book, with elements of seriousness in it to read. It has so much that is relatable and recognisable. It’s attempted rather well to explain all that we’ve been witnessing for years.
I recommend this humorous, fact-filled, non-fiction book that’s perfect for everyone’s book collection.
Find Tickets at The Edinburgh Fringe Festival, the biggest fringe festival in the world in the link here: https://tickets.edfringe.com/venues/underbelly-bristo-square
















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