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The Social Lives of Dogs
 
 

The Social Lives of Dogs [Hardcover]

Elizabeth Marshall Thomas
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, who has written evocatively on the ways of dogs (The Hidden Life of Dogs) and cats (The Tribe of the Tiger) at large, here turns her attention to the particular canines--and other animals--with which she shares her home.

Marshall's narrative begins with the arrival of an unfortunate, highly intelligent creature named Sundog, who, excluded from the somewhat constricted worlds of her older dogs, is forced to take his place in the next available pack--that of Marshall and the other human inhabitants of her New Hampshire home. "Perhaps we were not his first choice, but he took us," Marshall writes of Sundog learning his proper place in their order and they in his. Much as domestic dogs enjoy each other's company, Marshall hazards, when in the presence of humans each becomes a competitor for attention and food. Humans, in that world of small rivalries, become not so much alphas or pack leaders--as so many books have it--as they do "sources of life," providers of food and security. Such power can corrupt, of course, and at points Marshall observes that popular methods of dog training--or dog control--can do more harm than good, at least as far as a dog's emotional well-being is concerned.

Through her tales of Sundog, Misty, and her other dogs (and cats, and parrots), Marshall explores how fulfilling a life among animals can be. A little softer on the scientific explanations that drive her other books, Marshall's narrative shares the anecdotal richness of her earlier work. Any human who is curious about how dogs think and how the worlds of dogs and people intersect will find much of value in her pages. --Gregory McNamee

From Publishers Weekly

As she proved in her bestselling The Hidden Life of Dogs, no one writes with greater emotional intelligence about man's (and woman's) best friend than Thomas. Like that marvelous book, this worthy sequel reports on the canines in the author's life, beginning with Sundog, a large white dog Thomas found abandoned in Cambridge, Mass. Upon moving into Thomas's New Hampshire home (which also embraces cats, parrots and several humans, including the author's husband and aged mother), Sundog was ostracized by the three dogs already there and so bonded with Thomas and her husband, as "the first member of our household to cross species lines." As time and pages go by, Sundog is joined by Misty, a purebred sheepdog raised by an earlier owner under horribly rigid conditions; Pearl, an Australian shepherd-chow; Ruby, a maladjusted mix who leaks urine; and Sheila, who's probably part dingo. In narrative as dramatic as good fiction, but rooted in careful observation of animal ways, Thomas recounts how household members adjusted to one another, forming various groups and jockeying for position within and among groups; one extraordinarily gripping section details how Sheila, who as the household's newest member should have occupied the lowest position among the dogs, worked her way up the canine ladder through aggression and guile until Pearl came up with a diplomatic "solution" to her challenge. As enchanting as Thomas's stories are, the most potent magic in her charismatic, opinionated book comes from her ability to lead readers into a fresh world, one that allows animals their own minds (where, for instance, a dog might try "her best to charm us with her pleasant ways"). Anyone who cares about animals will relish joining Thomas in that rich and happy place. Illus. by Jared Taylor Williams. (June)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
OUR group of mixed species began soon after my husband and I moved to New Hampshire from Virginia. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars a peaceable kingdom, May 18 2004
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This is one woman's story of living with (besides her family) a houseful of canines, cats, and other assorted critters and how they managed to co-exist peacefully (most of the time). Basically, it is a series of revealing anecdotes and stories, most of them heartwarming, a few heartbreaking or even astonishing (including two very different accounts of encounters with large wild cats). As with Lorenz's MAN MEETS DOG or Masson's DOGS NEVER LIE ABOUT LOVE, read this for the stories and not the science.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Not sure what to think...., Jun 25 2003
By 
"kd_knickers" (Kingston, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
I borrowed this from the local library thinking it would be a great and interesting book. I love reading about animals, particularly dogs, and love realizing that I am not the only 'animal-nut' out there. However....some nuts are just nuttier and I would definitely have to classify Thomas as one of them.

She talks about anthropomorphism and how it is not as negative a term as many scholarly and scientific people would like us to believe. I don't exactly disagree with her, but I do think lines need to be drawn between what is human and what is not. Dogs are not. Yes, they are living, breathing, FEELING creatures but that still doesn't make them human. I don't doubt that they, like most if not all animals, think and feel but I do think that Thomas is in great danger of doing a disservice to animals in the way that she projects onto them.

I had to stop reading the book b/c, honestly put, I felt that I was reading the diary of a kook; someone who THOUGHT she knew what she was talking about but unfortunately someone who was TOO extreme in her ideas and opinions.

I would not recommend the book, nor do I wish to read anything else by her. I feel her ideas/opinions are too clouded by emotion and a desire to see what is not/could not/should not be there. She is the reason why science has made anthropomorphism negative.

Thank god I borrowed and didn't buy.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable and enlightening, Mar 7 2003
By 
citywulf (Atlanta, Georgia USA) - See all my reviews
If, like me, you were horrified by the events in The Hidden Lives of Dogs, you needn't worry about a repeat in this wonderful book. The author has embraced the joy of the human-dog bond, and in fact by allowing her dogs much more freedom than most dogs enjoy has come to understand that dogs DO chose us for their companions! Her insights show how wolf heritage combines with generations of human cohabitation to create a one-of-a-kind animal in our dogs.

Her opinion that dogs are slaves is only mildly off-putting, though her strong stance against euthanasia is sad to read. Hopefully she will continue to mature in her view of dogs and realize that it is not a betrayal to euthanize an animal whose body has so deteriorated that he spends every moment in agony. I feel that I know these dogs well, and the author a little better, and like to "revisit" them all from time to time.

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