Nicholas H. Dodman
If Only They Could Speak
Stories about Pets and Their People
A San Francisco Chronicle bestseller: a veterinary behaviorist evokes James Herriot with these remarkable stories of distressed pets and their equally troubled owners.
Did you hear about the dog who always arranged exactly six pieces of
kibble in buttonhole depressions in the couch before he could lie down? Or
the cat who compulsively hoarded shiny objects? In If Only They Could
Speak, Dr. Nicholas H. Dodman, a renowned animal behaviorist, presents
thirteen true stories about troubled pets and their distressed owners,
revealing that the emotional problems of animals are often as complex,
heartrending, and treatable as those of their human counterparts.
Sadly, just fifteen years ago, euthanasia, which still today remains a
so-called "solution" for millions of pets, was the only way to deal with a
pet who was untrainable or unresponsive to human commands. A dog with a
propensity to bite or a cat who urinated indoors constantly would have been
sent to the proverbial pound, and almost always to a premature death. Dodman,
believing that animal psychopharmacology could yield results as promising as
those experienced by humans, began studying a wide array of psychological
maladies that afflict pets, believing that careful drug use, be it Prozac,
Valium, or newer psychiatric medications, could help save the lives of even
the most profoundly troubled dogs and cats.
These poignant, emotional stories reveal the fruits of Dodman's research,
which he has carried out as the founder of the Animal Behavior Clinic at
Tufts Veterinary School in Grafton, Massachusetts. With characteristic humor,
compassion, and a profound understanding of the way animals think and feel,
Dodman explores how separation anxiety, jealousy, fear, and death all affect
the lives of the animals he has treated. In "Second Chance," Dodman
describes a cat named Pia who grew so anxious when her owner went away that
she began to pull her hair out in clumps, while in "Menage-a-trois," the
arrival of a new man, soon to become a husband, threatened the intimate
relationship that had previously existed between a businesswoman and her
formerly affectionate cat named Pumpkin. In "Life with Lenny," an owner's
physical ailments were so profound that they affected the emotional stability
of his faithful Rottweiler, and in "The Two Dogs of Mrs. Spinelli," an
owner's love of one dog over the other leads to dire consequences for all
three.
The stories in If Only They Could Speak are memorable in their
portrayal of the powerful emotions of pets and in demonstrating how far
veterinary medicine has come in the last fifteen years in bringing about an
end to animal suffering. Echoing Albert Schweitzer's belief that, "until he
extends his cycle of compassion to include all living things, man will not
himself find peace," Dodman has written a deeply humane book that promises
to become a classic of animal literature. Animal Personality Assessment Guide included. 15 b/w photographs.
"Nicholas Dodman may very well be the best thing that ever happened to
domestic pets. . . . This book is a collection of stories that describe his
efforts and should be required reading for anyone who even thinks about
getting an animal. What's more, the book is skillfully written, very
exciting, and highly entertaining to read, even for people whose pets do not
have problems."Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, author of The Social Lives
of Dogs and The Hidden Life of Dogs
"Dr. Dodman is a master storyteller and a wry observer of both human and
animal behavior. The dogs, cats, and people who leap off these pages are
unforgettable."Franklin M. Loew, D.V.M., Ph.D., former dean of
veterinary medicine at Tufts and Cornell Universities and president of
Becker College
"A truly landmark book...an immensely pleasurable read. If you're an animal lover and you want to be entertained, and need to be educated, read this book."Marty Becker, DVM, Good Morning, America Veterinarian
"This book is nearly as fun to read as a game of fetchexcept you come back knowing a whole lot about why our pets do the things they do."Steve Dale, author of the syndicated newspaper column "My Pet World"
"This is a "must read" book for anyone interested in the behavior of dogs and catsand people too!"Stanley Coren, author of How to Speak Dog and The Intelligence of Dogs
Dr. Nicholas H. Dodman, trained in Scotland and is currently a leading veterinarian practicing at Tufts University in Massachusetts.
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