Robert Timothy Dowling (/ˈdlɪŋ/; born June 1963) is an American journalist and author who writes a weekly column in The Guardian about his life with his family in London.

Tim Dowling
Dowling playing the banjo in the band Police Dog Hogan
Born
Robert Timothy Dowling[1]

June 1963[2]
OccupationJournalist
Known forWriting

Career edit

Dowling worked in data entry for a films database before he became a freelance journalist, first working for GQ, then women's magazines and the Independent on Sunday.[3] He is a columnist for The Guardian and has a weekly column in the paper's Saturday magazine, Weekend. His column replaced Jon Ronson's in 2007. He writes observational columns, often about his wife.[4] Sam Leith of The Guardian noted that "Dowling's a very fresh and smart writer, as he needs to be. Stories about machete massacres or ebola pandemics pretty much write themselves: writing about nothing much, week in, week out, is the real test."[5] Dowling also worked as a cartoonist for a short time.[6]

Dowling's books include a 2001 book about the inventor of the disposable razor, King Camp Gillette,[7] Suspicious Packages and Extendable Arms, a collection of his writing from The Guardian, and The Giles Wareing Haters' Club, his 2007 debut novel concerning a journalist Googling himself (narcissurfing[8]) who finds an online club of people who hate him, inspired by Dowling searching for his name online.[9] Giles Wareing was reviewed by TLS.[10] Metro said it is "a fine comedy of domestic triviality".[11]

Dowling said of his 2014 book How to Be a Husband: "It got quite a bit of publicity in the U.K. when it came out and [my wife] wasn't prepared for all that."[12] Tom Hodgkinson writing in The Spectator called this book "a rare delight".[13] Leith in The Guardian said there is "pleasure and treasure here."[5] David Evans wrote in The Independent: "It's a rare thing to be able to write about life as a husband and father in such a way as to elicit nods of recognition among those who are neither of those things; Dowling does it with panache."[14]

Published work edit

  • Inventor of the Disposable Culture: King Camp Gillette 1855–1932 (Faber & Faber, 2001, ISBN 978-0571208104)
  • Not the Archer prison diary (Ebury Press, 2002, ISBN 0091892392
  • Suspicious Packages & Extendable Arms (Guardian Newspapers Ltd, 2007, ISBN 0-85265-087-6)
  • The Giles Wareing Haters' Club (Picador, 2008, ISBN 0-330-44617-7)
  • How to Be a Husband (Fourth Estate, 2014, ISBN 978-0-00-752766-3)
  • Dad You Suck (Fourth Estate, 2017, ISBN 978-0-00-752769-4)

Personal life edit

Dowling was born in Connecticut. His mother was a schoolteacher, his father was a dentist, and he has a brother and two sisters.[3] He moved to the UK from New York at the age of 27 and currently lives in London with his wife Sophie de Brandt[15][16] and their three sons.[17] He enjoys skiing with his sons, having learned to ski as a child in the US.[18]

Dowling has played banjo (which his wife bought for his birthday) in the band Police Dog Hogan[19][20] since 2009, and he writes self-deprecatingly about their festival gigs, including Glastonbury, in his column.[21][22][23]

References edit

External links edit