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Pretzel, Houdini & Olive: Essays On the Dogs of My Life
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15 September 2020

Told from the perspective of a self-identified “crazy dog lady,” these eleven interconnected essays follow one woman’s relations with five different dogs. Together, they travel over terrain spanning her husband’s battle with cancer, his death, her grieving process, and her rejoining the living as her dogs lead her forward from the other end of their leashes. Alongside her personal story, she considers such cultural issues as Americans’ unhealthy relationships with the natural world, ageism across species, poverty and privilege, hoarding, and the meaning of happiness. This is not a sentimental “who-rescued-whom?” book about the healing power of animals. Instead, it explores one representative human’s relationships with dogs, with all their joys but also their frustrations, neuroses, and downright craziness.
"Woven through these evocative memoir essays are the dogs of grief and joy—and of Kolkata. Street dogs and spirit dogs. Rescue dogs that we hope might rescue us. Dogs of myth and history. Daily dogs whose fur we can touch. After the loss of her partner, Rajiv, Debby Thompson found herself unprepared for what she calls 'the animal part of loss,' the way 'skin cries' for contact. In these stories—gritty, visionary, and heartbreaking—are the dogs of this world, the dogs of life, the dogs of now and of now-let’s-go!" —Veronica Patterson, author of Sudden White Fan
"Deborah Thompson’s collection of dog stories leaps past the honed edge of the twenty-first-century self-absorbency to bring home the experience of simply existing in a warm, earthbound, sense-luscious, skin-wrapped body. Thompson appeases the grief of losing a husband to cancer with tending to the simple physical needs of her dogs. Walking, peeing, shitting, sniffing, humping, licking . . . her experiences with her dogs filter out the lumpy complications and sharpen the 'now' of existing with loss. Yet this collection of stories doesn’t trivialize existence with a pat on the furry head of canine cuteness. The author doesn’t explain how humans and dogs do what they do or why they do so. Instead, she winds us through the dark alleys of her life with those warm, unquestioning companions at her side. These stories do not glide along the surface of complications that grease the surface of our lives. They do not complain and they do not explain. Rather, they show how the hard edges of life can be softened by warmth, loyalty, and a good dog." —Florencia Ramirez, author of Eat Less Water