After the somewhat disappointing read of Wonderdog - How the Science of Dogs Changed the Science of Life by Jules Howard last year, I added How My Dog Saved My Life - Thirty Tales of Courage and Compassion by Cate Cochran to my TBR, convinced this would scratch my canine related itch.
Listening to the audiobook narrated by Kate Marcin, the book is a series of thirty stories of dog owners and the dogs that saved their lives. I guess I was expecting the majority of stories would be the kind where regular family dogs perform extraordinary feats of bravery or uncanny ability but that's not what I found.
There were a small handful of stories like those I expected to encounter, like the family dog who alerted a sleeping partner that his wife had collapsed in the basement and had a stroke. Another involved a 5 year old girl who fell into a corn crushing machine on her family's farm. Fortunately their German Shepherd ran to the farmer operating the mulching machine and barked insistently until he turned it off. This saved the girl's life although her brother had already run for help.
I wanted more stories like these, however the majority of the thirty life-saving events recounted in the book were about service dogs and their owners. Cochran provides a short bio of each of the owners, and the physical and mental challenges they face along with the service dogs who provide more than comfort and companionship.
All of the tales originated from Canada and after a while they began to feel formulaic and repetitive. There were many inferences that owners wouldn't have survived without the assistance and unconditional love of their service dogs with the reader left to assume they're implying they would have committed suicide if it weren't for their service dog. Perhaps I'm being a little harsh here or I went in with unrealistic expectations, but I was looking forward to reading a book about 30 times a dog literally saved someone's life, not 25 stories about hugely successful service dogs and the amazing bonds they develop with their owners. That's a completely different book in my opinion.
If I had to sum up this book in one word, I'd say 'woof' (repetitive) and I've decided to paws my reading about man's best friend here. Instead, I think I'll continue to enjoy the many videos of dogs using buttons to communicate with their owners, including Stella the talking dog and her speech pathologist owner.
Carpe Librum!























































