A man goes out of his house on some work, and his dog follows him. This dog has a puppy which follows her. But then it rains, there is a storm and the puppy gets lost in the forest. What happens to this puppy, as it navigates the hours, the days, the weeks on its own, is told in the rest of the story.
I have read many dog stories, but this is a story, the likes of which I've never read. Kristin Ekman tells us the story in the third person, but we are taken into the puppy's mind, into his heart, and we see things through his eyes, we smell the new smells he does, sense the dangers he feels, feel things through his skin, and before long it is us in the forest, feeling the cold and the hunger, and the danger. Ekman doesn't anthropomorphize the dog, doesn't make it human, but takes us into the dog's mind, into the dog's heart, and makes us see how the world looks from there. It is fascinating. From the first passage,
"When does something begin? It doesn’t begin. There’s always something else before it. It begins the way a stream starts as a rivulet and a rivulet starts as a trickle of water in the marsh. It’s the rain that makes the marsh water rise.
...
Where does a tale begin? Under the root of a spruce, perhaps. Yes, under the root of a spruce tree. A little grey fellow was lying there, all curled up, his muzzle tucked under his tail. A dog. But he didn’t know that."
the book grabs our attention, and refuses to let go till the end.
I loved 'The Dog'. It is one of my favourite dog novels, up there with 'Dogsbody' by Diana Wynne Jones, and 'The Poet's Dog' by Patricia McLachlan. I am glad I read it. I want to read more of Kerstin Ekman's books now. She is one of the great Swedish writers and I discovered that she has a long backlist. Hoping that more of her books are available in English translation.
Have you read this book? What do you think about it?