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You Tell Your Dog First by Alison Pace — book cover

You Tell Your Dog First

by Alison Pace
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Overview

You Tell Your Dog First…

 

About the date you just had…about the questionable results of a medical test…about the good and the bad…about everything.

 

For years, award-winning author Alison Pace was a dog person without a dog. And then, she got Carlie—a feisty and fluffy West Highland white terrier. She could weed out bad boyfriends with a sniff of her button-black nose and win the hearts of lifelong friends with an adoring gaze. Suddenly, Alison had a constant companion and confidante, who went with her on long morning rambles in Central Park, on trips to the country and the beach, and on her search for inner peace, love, and happiness. Through Carlie, Alison found herself connected to the world as never before.

 

With her trademark warmth, wit and humor, Alison shares her stories…the tales of a dog person who found her dog.

About the Author, Alison Pace

Alison Pace is the author of the novels If Andy Warhol Had A Girlfriend, Pug Hill, Through Thick And Thin, City Dog, and A Pug’s Tale.  Her essays have appeared in several anthologies including Howl: A Collection Of The Best Contemporary Dog Wit. She lives in New York City where she is at work on another book.

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Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

For years, there was something missing in Alison Pace's life. It wasn't boyfriends; they came and went with disturbing frequency. No what lacking was a constant companion, someone who listen sympathetically to all her problems and be there, tail wagging, for all good news. You Tell Your Dog First renders the story of how the author of Pug Hill filled that void with Carlie, an elegant and sometimes rambunctious West Highland white terrier. A well-turned, six-footed love story; a trade paperback and NOOK original.

Kirkus Reviews

A popular writer whose fiction often features dogs (A Pug's Tale, 2011, etc.) lets fans in on the events in her life that served as inspiration. Pace's 2008 novel City Dog starred her beloved Carlie, a West Highland white terrier who is also pictured on the cover of this memoir. When she was 29, a confirmed New Yorker with two published novels under her belt, the author decided that, while she would like to find the man of her dreams, what she wanted most was a dog to share her life. Coming from a suburban home in Long Island filled with canines, this was not too surprising. Her family was so seriously into dogs, she writes, that when they gathered for holidays, the stories they would share were all about their pets; she still dates major events by which dogs they had at any given time. A feature writer with an advance on a third novel, she was working from home and able to care for a dog even in a city apartment. The first hurdle was finding a rental apartment that accepted pets, near enough to Central Park for dog-walking. That done, Pace settled on a 13-month-old Westie trained to be a show dog but disqualified by bow legs. Carlie quickly became the center of her besotted new owner's life. The author shares her experiences accustoming a nervous pet to city living, taking her along to social events and vetting prospective suitors based on how they hit it off with Carlie. Stranger-than-fiction moments include the discovery that another neighborhood Westie and Carlie were half siblings and the author's encounter in the park with a fellow Westie owner who became her therapist. A charming memoir about the special joys of having a pet and the ups and downs of single living.

Book Details

Published
November 6, 2012
Publisher
Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780425255872

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