I appreciated how the author approached this subject and completed her study. Additionally, I agreed with her on many points; I was also able to think critically about certain aspects on this subject that I had not previously considered. For instance, are veterinarians mechanics helping to fix property until it is no longer needed, or are they pediatricians advocating for lives that cannot speak for themselves? However, the author was tiresomely repetitive. She would beat the readers to death with several points she wanted to make, which would appear in all chapters. If the book was half the length, it still would have made the same points and been a much more enjoyable read.
A compelling although not altogether flattering view of euthanasia in veterinary medicine. Takes a hard look at how veterinarians deal with providing compassionate death and also maintaining their sanity. I think for veterinarians they won't find much that truly shocking. However, hopefully like me they would have moments where unethical behavior is mentioned and they think "Gosh, I would never do that". Interesting seeing that side of our jobs from an outsider's perspective. I would be interested to see how this might be applied to people consider legalizing human euthanasia - I think there are some things that would be similar, but also a lot of differences.