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Pack of Two: The Intricate Bond Between People and Dogs [Paperback]

Caroline Knapp
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (63 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Jun 8 1999
At the age of 36, Caroline Knapp, author of the acclaimed bestseller Drinking:A Love Story, found herself confronted with a monumental task: redefining her world.  She had faced the loss of both her parents, given up a twenty-year relationship with alcohol, and, as she writes, "I was wandering around in a haze of uncertainty, blinking up at the biggest questions: Who am I without parents and without alcohol? How to form attachments, and where to find comfort, in the face of such daunting vulnerability?"  An answer materialized in the most unlikely form: that of a dog.  Eighteen months to the day after she quit drinking, Knapp stumbled upon an eight-week-old puppy at a local animal shelter, took her home, and named her Lucille.  Now two years old, Lucille has become a central force in Knapp's life: "In her," she writes,  "I have found solace, joy, a bridge to the world."

Caroline Knapp has been celebrated as much for her fresh insight into emotional and psychological issues as she has been for her gifts as a writer.  In Pack of Two, she brings the same perception and talent to bear on the rich, complicated terrain of human-animal relationships.  In addition to mining her own experience with Lucille, Knapp speaks to a wide variety of dog people--from animal behaviorists and psychologists to other owners whose dogs have deeply affected their lives--about this emotionally complex, sometimes daunting, often profoundly healing alliance.  Throughout, she explores the shift in canine roles from working partners to intimate companions and looks, too, at how this new kinship, this wordless bond, becomes a template for what we most desire ourselves.

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Pack of Two: The Intricate Bond Between People and Dogs + Drinking: A Love Story + Let's Take the Long Way Home: A Memoir of Friendship
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Caroline Knapp is head over heels in love--not with a human being, but with her mixed-breed dog, Lucille. From the moment Lucille first locked eyes with Knapp through the bars of an animal shelter cage, the intelligent, pointy-eared mutt began to transform Knapp's life. Reeling from the deaths of both her parents, a breakup with a long-term boyfriend, and her newly won sobriety after a 20-year battle with the bottle (which was skillfully chronicled in a previous memoir, Drinking: A Love Story), Knapp found in Lucille not only companionship, but "consistency, continuity, connection. In a word, love." Although she doesn't regard Lucille as a replacement for alcohol and lost loved ones, Knapp does believe "that in loving her I have had that sense of being filled anew and essentially redirected, an old identity shattered and a new one emerging in its stead." In Pack of Two Knapp, with the help of dog psychiatrists, trainers, breeders, and owners, explores the partnership between human and dog and the mysteries of the canine mind--how dogs love, how they think, and how they see human beings. And despite her findings that the dog will remain essentially "mysterious ... unknowable," Knapp is ultimately at peace with this, still devouring the moments when dog and human can "transcend the language barrier" to "understand what the other wants and feels." This book pays homage to the wonderful and complex relationship between one woman and her dog. --Naomi Gesinger --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Following her bestselling memoir, Drinking: A Love Story, Knapp's account of her "mutual and unambiguous and exceptionally private" relationship with Lucille, a small German shepherd mix, illuminates beautifully how the dog's unconditional love filled the gaping hole in Knapp's emotional life after her parents died and she quit drinking. Drawing on charming but alpha-tough anecdotes from her own experience and those of her dog-loving friends (primarily single and female), Knapp describes with affectionate amusement the great, often expensive lengths to which owners go to insure that their pets are well trained and well balanced. As a pup, Lucille goes with Knapp to obedience school for education, to day care for baby-sitting and to play dates with other dogs for recreation. They visit dog psychics and therapists to explain mysterious, troubled behavior, and a canine behaviorist for a few weeks of discipline. Throughout, Knapp has a canny nose for emotional detail: "Living with a dog is like being followed around 24 hours a day by a mute psychoanalyst," Knapp writes. "Feelings float up from inside and attach themselves to the dog, who will not question their validity, or hold up your behavior to scrutiny, or challenge your perceptions." Lucille's arrival is followed by boyfriend Michael's departure, and Knapp intelligently plumbs criticism from outside the dog world that she and others "use their pets as surrogates, to retreat into the world of animals in order to bypass more problematic and complex human relationships." Anyone who loves dogs, and particularly prospective first-time owners, will delight in this exploration of man's (or in this case, woman's) best friend and of the "significant other" role a dog often plays in a one-person household. First serial to Glamour.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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First Sentence
IMAGINE A SCALED-DOWN, delicately boned German shepherd do, black and gray and tan instead of black and sable like a purebred, her face the color of ink with faint gray mask. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars The bond of unconditional love is forever Feb 28 2003
Format:Paperback
Heartwarming story of the loving bond between a woman and her beloved pet dog. The consistency and strength of the bond is a true testimony to the value of unconditional love, the fact it lasts forever, and the potential for inherent pain. Saw myself in every page, and the loving bond I have shared with my pets. Most recently: the sharing of life and love with my Boston Terrier, Boomerang,,,, then the shattering pain of loss and grief. And finally, a spiritual resolution, loving acceptance and ultimate joy. Arlene Millman, author of BOOMERANG - A MIRACLE TRILOGYJ (The tale of a remarkable Boston Terrier).
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By Heather
Format:Paperback
Knapp is a very gifted writer: engaging, humorous, insightful, and original. I didn't want to stop reading this book--it was simply delightful. Being a devoted dog lover, I was touched by the unique ways in which Knapp described why we love dogs and how they are so important to our well-being. I truly would recommend this book to anyone who has had a special relationship with a dog and cares about understanding and deepening their relationships with animals.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Dogs is dogs, but we love them Aug 1 2002
By Sabreur
Format:Paperback
Pack of Two lives up to its subtitle--it is an intricate and subtle exploration of the relationships between people (mostly single) and their dogs (often plural). Knapp appears in the book to be working through her reservations about the strength of her attachment to her dog Lucille. There is some pretty convoluted introspection, but she eventually comes out with a very life- and dog-affirming position--in the best cases, we love our dogs for themselves, not as replacements for kids, partners, etc. Well, no kidding. I think she approaches, but does not look straight at, the possibility that the affirmation we receive from our dogs makes us stronger--because we have dogs, we don't need people as much, and may be happier to be without partner or kids--although she makes the point that dog people tend to be more sociable and have more friends (often other dog people)... Alone (if you call hanging with the mutts alone) more, but less needy. Not a bad way to be.

One footnote. Knapp unfortunately confuses operant conditioning/positive reinforcement with no training/no discipline. In fact, operant conditioning/positive reinforcement training requires a great deal of discipline--it's just the discipline doesn't take the form of strangling your dog, pinching his/her ears, etc. People who don't train their dogs are really irresponsible. People who believe you have to hurt your dog to train it are either misguided or sadistic. Jean Donaldson's "The Culture Clash" makes these points clearly and forcefully.

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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars "Pack of Two"
I'm 3/4's of the way through this book. Wow, what a great read. Ms. Knapp certainly has made it clear to me that there is PLENTY to be said for the human, dog relationship. Read more
Published on July 9 2002 by Debra Ellis
5.0 out of 5 stars Sad news
I am sorry to say that Caroline Knapp died a couple of weeks ago at the age of 42. She obviously touched many people's hearts and will be missed.
Published on Jun 17 2002 by Alexa
4.0 out of 5 stars Lucille, fetch an editor!
Ms. Knapp used to be one of those bright, perceptive, hideously self-absorbed women whose only topic of conversation was herself. Then she got a dog, so now she has two topics. Read more
Published on April 16 2002 by Jeff Bricker
5.0 out of 5 stars A work of beauty and much surprise.
Carolyn Knapp's beautifully written treatment of an interspecies relationship theorizes the many fragmentary observations that any dog-owner will make. Read more
Published on July 23 2001 by Erin O'Brien
4.0 out of 5 stars Exploring a relationship...
A thoroughly enjoyable read... The book was a bit more introspective than I was expecting. The author spices the chapters with tidbits of her observations on others'... Read more
Published on July 17 2001 by k-r-h
4.0 out of 5 stars Dog Lover says "must read but be careful"
I thoroughly enjoyed the book as soon as I started to bite into it. My husband and I own a 9 month old Jack Russell terrier named Memphis (had her since she was about 10 weeks... Read more
Published on July 10 2001 by Larissa
5.0 out of 5 stars It drew me in...
From the beginning I was drawn not only by the subject matter (as an unapologetic dog lover), but by the way Ms. Knapp expressed herself. Read more
Published on Jun 23 2001 by D. J. Zemenick
5.0 out of 5 stars One of a kind...
After reading many books about "dogs", a friend suggested this book. Unlike many others, this book deals almost exclusively with the dog/person relationship, and... Read more
Published on Mar 12 2001
2.0 out of 5 stars A little too neurotic for my tastes.
I am a dog lover and appreciated Caroline's love for her dog. But I found her analysis that relationships with dogs are all tied to other messed parts of our lives a little much. Read more
Published on Jan 21 2001 by Ronald Brown
3.0 out of 5 stars Read half of it, anyway...
Love your dog?

So does Caroline Knapp, author of Drinking, A Love Story.

This is an interesting look into the relationships people have with their canine best friends - is it... Read more

Published on Jan 8 2001 by Lolly var Lachland
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