Forget the Tiger Mom phenomenon. All over the internet now is Pamela Druckermanโ€™s new book, Bringing Up Bebe, which asserts that French parents do a better job of raising children than their American counterparts.

Druckerman is an American who lives in Paris with her British husband and three children โ€” in the book, she regales readers with examples of her own American โ€œhyper-parentingโ€ and asks why we Americans seem to be enslaved to our kids.

โ€œWhy was it, for example, that in the hundreds of hours Iโ€™d clocked at French playgrounds, Iโ€™d never seen a child (except my own) throw a temper tantrum? Why didnโ€™t my French friends ever need to rush off the phone because their kids were demanding something? Why hadnโ€™t their living rooms been taken over by teepees and toy kitchens, the way ours had?โ€ she asks in story adapted from the book for WSJ Online.

Yesterdayโ€™s NYTimes review was lukewarm โ€” โ€œMuch of the so-called French child rearing wisdom compiled here is obvious,โ€ wrote reviewer Susannah Meadows. Really? Iโ€™ve seen too much of what Druckerman describes in my own home and around Baltimore (yes, I mean you, dad at Miss Shirleyโ€™s whose toddler kept coming up to our table) to not give it some consideration. Could we learn something from the French?