Short stories have never been my favorite medium, but dogs are among my favorite characters in fiction, so I hoped that this would be a fun collection - perfect to take along with me for a weekend at the lake house. Unfortunately, this is only the perfect collection to accompany a box of tissues and a private room - well, unless you are a pretty crier and don’t mind when people keep asking you what’s wrong! From the very first story, “Gracie’s Last Walk,” Katz opens with - as the title suggests - loss. This theme of loss and death appears directly or in passing within several of the other stories (“Yankee Dog”, “Old Dogs,” “Guardian Angel”). One positive attribute that is featured in nearly every story is the importance of animal shelters. Though many purebred dogs are mentioned here, it is shelters and rescue organizations that are highlighted (in nearly every single story) - and their uphill battle makes dog-lovers want to go and adopt another dog after some of the stories (“The Surrender Bay”, “Puppy Commando,” “Laura Passerby”). And though the collection focuses on dogs - other animals are featured, too (“Barn Cat,” “). Katz also plays with point-of-view in several stories and sets them in rather unusual locations (“Day in the Life of Pearl and Joan,” “Luther and Minnie in Heaven”). The theme that surprised me the most, and really added to the overall depressing nature of the collection was the mention of economics. Like the importance of shelters, almost every story had a character out of work, or in financial trouble, or made mention of how much more difficult it is to pay for a pet after what Katz consistently terms, the “Great Recession of 2008”. While I do think that it is important to realize just how deeply affected our country has been, I just wasn’t expecting this from a collection of stories titled, DANCING DOGS. I expected a lot more joy and whimsy, and a lot less tears and hardship.