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Elizabeth Marshall Thomas
Book
Description
In her absorbing bestseller, The Hidden Life of Dogs, Elizabeth Marshall
Thomas provided fascinating answers to the question "What do dogs want?" It
turns out that more than anything, they want the company of other dogs. Now, in this frank
and moving sequel, she explores how, despite this desire, they have beautifully adapted to
life with their human owners. If they can't belong to a group with similar dogs, they will
establish or join one with other members of the household, whether those members are men,
women, children, other dogs of different ages and breeds, cats, or birds. And, contrary to
our assumptions that we wield the power in our relationships with our dogs, it is they who
are teaching us new behaviors -- even settling disputes in ways we are unaware of.
No one writing today about dogs and people has Elizabeth Marshall Thomas's skills as a
classically trained anthropologist and popularizer. What she has observed and analyzed
will be illuminating to all of us who have wondered about our pets' behavior. Do dogs have
different barks that mean different things? How does Snoopy recognize as family people he
sees only once a year? And why does Misty bark at strangers she sees every day? What
factors contribute to making a dog difficult to house-train? Why do certain dogs and cats
get along so well? How do animals train each other?
Thomas explores these questions by taking us into the mixed-species groups of her own
household, particularly the lives of her remarkable dogs, with their differences in
breeding, early training, and personality. Misty, a purebred, had been kept in a crate,
alone, for most of her first year; lonely and insecure, she was afraid of grass and
stairs, which she had never seen. Ruby was abandoned, having been pronounced untrainable.
Pearl had lived with Thomas's son in his large household, and on her arrival at Thomas's
house, she behaved like the well-mannered, self-possessed being she was. And Sundog, the
most loyal, self-confident, courageous of all, accepted the arrival of each of these new
dogs, but had made a group consisting of himself and Thomas's husband, so the others
sorted themselves out without him. Each of these dogs, like any other, wanted more than
anything to belong to a group, and how they organized themselves into felicitous
relationships without any input from their owners is the most compelling of Elizabeth
Thomas's many findings.
Few dogs get to live with their chosen loved ones; they are slaves to our desires. We
convince ourselves, however wrongly, that we know what's best for them. The Social
Lives of Dogs presents marvelous evidence of the power of the group. And those of us
fortunate enough to be given the trust of any honorable dog will have our lives enlarged.
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