Showing posts with label Animal Grief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animal Grief. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 14, 2023

The Purest Bond

An entertaining, thoroughly researched and profoundly informative book addressing the tremendous impact dogs have on human lives.

 

“Dogs…serve as a sort of balm to the mental health struggles and ongoing stress that are plaguing people worldwide. Our canine companions help us feel grounded and present-minded, leading by example,” writes authors Jenn Golbeck (The Golden Ratio Cookbook) and Stacey Colino (Unlock Your Menopause Type). In The Purest Bond: Understanding the Human-Canine Connection, they present an entertaining, insightful treatise on the impact dogs have on human life. This writing duo--with accomplished backgrounds in academic, scientific, and psychological issues--weaves together groundbreaking research and down-to-earth stories that explore the many benefits of the human-canine bond.

 

Supported by scientific information, the narrative weaves in psychological studies examining how dogs impact, support, and improve the mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual aspects of the human condition. A thorough section on aging dogs and coping with loss and grief is most compassionately rendered.

 

“In exchange for us feeding, loving, and caring for them, (dogs) pay us back many times over.” The gratifying research culled and entertainingly presented by Golbeck and Colino, will change the lives of dog lovers and readers similarly.

 

The Purest Bone: Understanding the Human-Canine Connection by Jen Golbeck and Stacey Colino

Atria Books, $28.00 hardcover, 9781668007846, 256 pages

Publishing Date: November 14, 2023

To order this book on INDIEBOUND/Bookshop.Org, link HERE



Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Good Grief

A captivating, impeccably rich study about the many ways companion animals enrich lives and how people mourn and grieve their loss. 

 

“When we open our hearts to animals, death is the inevitable price,” writes E.B. Bartels, a former bookseller at Newtonville Books, Mass. Good Grief, her impeccably researched first book, offers deeply personal stories about the many ways companion animals enrich lives and how animal lovers must ultimately cope with the pain of their loss.

 

Having a pet is a voluntary choice, and mourning pets is nothing new. Bartels states, “…67 percent of American households, 84.9 million homes, own ‘some sort of pet’…despite the inevitable loss that comes with that relationship, the ways people grieve a dead pet aren’t always taken seriously.” Bartels, a life-long and devout animal lover, has grappled with this predicament since she was a child. Her father loved animals, but her mother claimed she was “violently allergic” to “anything with fur, feathers, or hair.” That left young, animal-loving Bartels to cultivate fresh water fish in table-top aquariums. When “trouble in (fish) paradise” began and occupants were found floating in the tank and/or were swallowed up by larger fish, Bartels became intrigued by the nature of loss and grief. Starting in kindergarten, she developed something of a “pet aftercare industry,” where she assisted with animal funerals and burials with peers at school. 

 

This in-depth, richly informative narrative is replete with down-to-earth stories from Bartels herself and those of ordinary pet lovers, pet care professionals, celebrities and historians. The pivotal roles pet birds, reptiles, rodents, horses, dogs and cats have played in personal lives--and how they are ultimately grieved and remembered--are interspersed among fascinating historical facts: The Egyptians treasured the intimacy offered by pets and exotic animals and were known to bury them alongside humans in the same sarcophagi. The Summum community, a contemporary religious group in Utah, mummifies--preserves, in whole--their beloved animal companions. Popular icon, Barbra Streisand was so devastated by the loss of her beloved 14-year-old dog, Samantha, that she had her cloned in order to keep “some part of her alive.” Bartels thoroughly examines these and many other topics including euthanasia, taxidermy, ideas about reincarnation, pet cemeteries and more.

 

Readers, like Bartels, who long to consciously comprehend the pet-human bond--why people care so much for their pets, in life and in death, and what makes the bond so worthwhile and why--will be educated, greatly enriched and find much to reflect upon.

 

Good Grief: On Loving Pets, Here and Hereafter by E.B. Bartels

Mariner Books (Harper Collins Publishers), $27.99 hardcover, 272 pages, 9780358212331

Publication Date: August 2, 2022

To order this book on INDIEBOUND link HERE

 

NOTE: To read this review as published on Shelf Awareness for the Book Trade (May 3, 2022 ), link HERE

 

NOTE: To read a condensed version of this review on Shelf Awareness: Reader's Edition (July 1, 2022), link HERE