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Hardcover A Dog's History of America: How Our Best Friend Explored, Conquered, and Settled a Continent Book

ISBN: 0865476314

ISBN13: 9780865476318

A Dog's History of America: How Our Best Friend Explored, Conquered, and Settled a Continent

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Book Overview

In this fascinating history, Mark Derr, a regular contributor to the science section of The New York Times, looks at the ways in which we have relied on canines over the centuries to reshape the continent and examines how that often intimate relationship reflects who we are at a given cultural moment. Derr explores the varied roles of sled dogs, war dogs, guide dogs, show dogs, and bomb-sniffing dogs while recounting the exploits of such remarkable...

Customer Reviews

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Was Just like new~!

This book was in a VERY good condition. Very lucky i picked a right person to buy this book from and also was a decent price. =D

AWESOME BOOK

This is a great book. I can't believe so many have overlooked it. It is full of wonderful and relevant information to dogs and people today. Best I've gotten in a long time.

A fascinating tale not only of canine loyalty, but of human betrayal

A Dog's History of America: How Our Best Friend Explored, Conquered, and Settled a Continent is the history of canine companions in America during the past three centuries - from sled dogs and war dogs to guide dogs, show dogs, and bomb-sniffing dogs. A fascinating tale not only of canine loyalty, but of human betrayal, including breeders' desire to shape animal's evolution so much that inbreeding was widely practiced despite scientific warnings and firsthand evidence of its role in causing birth defects. Not all tales of the dog are noble; some, particularly those victimized by the demand to create and aggressive breed, are notorious for turning on and sometimes even killing humans. A Dog's History of America strives to be thorough, objective, and balanced, portraying the truth as accurately as historical record tells it, and is a "must-read" for true dog lovers.

An intriguing slant on history

From its arrival 20,000 years ago with the first settlers crossing from Siberia, to its present as inbred pedigree and drug-sniffing cop, Derr takes a comprehensive survey approach to the dog. He examines the major incidents of our history - Columbus (no dogs on his first voyage; a mistake he never made again!), the ruthless Spanish Conquistadors, the Civil War, the Depression, WWII and more - from the point of view of the dog's mostly overlooked contribution. Although the fact-filled narrative does not conjure up a lot of personality, the loyal character of the dog quickly emerges as crucial. One man's best friend is that man's enemy's enemy. Again and again dogs are trained to attack and kill - the Conquistador stories and those of treeing runaway slaves are particularly gruesome. Dog loyalty has more benign uses, of course, and Derr explores most of them, from herder and hunter to celebrity companion and adventurer. Explorers, from Lewis and Clark to Ernest Shackleton, have depended on dogs for companionship as well as hunting, guidance or transportation. But in times of trouble doggie devotion has often led to the final sacrifice - sustenance. That best-friend thing has never been totally mutual. Derr's writing doesn't sparkle, but his breadth of research astounds, and there's a compelling feel to the narrative that comes from the canine slant on familiar history. Dog-loving history buffs will particularly enjoy it.

Dogs Make History

"Dogs are here to stay because a great many people could not manage without them," says Mark Derr, and he is taking the long view. In _A Dog's History of America: How Our Best Friend Explored, Conquered, and Settled a Continent_ (North Point Press), Derr has tried to examine the thousands of years of American dogdom, with many surprises about what dogs have done for us and to us. Most of us who love dogs as companions aren't used to thinking of them as accomplishing labor for us, but the dog as a mere pet is a relatively recent invention. For all those millennia before, dogs worked for us, or fed us. Indeed, our lovable canine friends performed horrendous acts of torture and murder upon us, though it must be said, almost always at the instigation of other humans. Some readers who look through this volume with a devoted dog at their feet will find much of it hard to take. Dogs first came here around 20,000 years ago, following the humans crossing from Siberia to Alaska. Not much is known about the Indian dogs because of a lack of history. They were companions, but they were firstly guards and pack animals. Christopher Columbus did not have a single dog on his first trip to the Americas, but this was probably the last time boats of exploring or colonizing nations did not bring dogs from Europe. Columbus himself did not go without them for his second voyage, for the bishop who was in charge of outfitting the fleet added twenty greyhounds and mastiffs for the purpose of making war. Thus begins a long and distressing history of dogs used as weapons, which will make difficult reading for modern Americans who romanticize their doggies. The Spanish brought dogs "specifically bred and trained to hunt down and disembowel Indians." In Puritan New England, dogs were used as guards and herd animals, and also to hound Indians. Before the Civil War, some dogs were trained to hunt runaway slaves, trained specifically to tree or corner a slave, and to maul him if he resisted. Police used dogs on civil rights protesters, and dogs were tools for torture in the abominable practices at the prison at Abu Ghraib. Easier reading concerns the changes, starting in the eighteenth century, by which dogs made a transition into the bourgeois home and became valued for loyalty and friendship, and the many stories about dogs beloved by presidents and other famous people. Derr has a huge and complex subject; as he says, the dog embodies "unconditional love and cold destruction, domesticity and wildness - opposite forces in continual, dynamic equilibrium." We are doing better by dogs in many ways, allowing them to be household friends rather than workers, improving their odds against disease, neutering more of them, and gradually reducing the number that have to be euthanized. We no longer round them up in the summers and shoot them to prevent rabies (or "hydrophobia"). We are not doing dogs good service by continuing to employ puppy mills, or inbreeding dogs
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