Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Pets and the City: True Tales of a Manhattan House Call Veterinarian

Rate this book
Hilarious, jaw-dropping, and heartfelt stories from New York City’s premier “house-call veterinarian” that take you into the exclusive penthouses and 4-star hotel rooms of the wealthiest New Yorkers and show that, when it comes to their pets, they are just as neurotic as any of us.

When a pet is sick, people—even the rich and famous—are at their most authentic and vulnerable. They could have a Monet on the wall and an Oscar on the shelf, but if their cat gets a cold, all they want to talk about are snotty noses and sneezing fits. That’s when they call premier in-home veterinarian Dr. Amy Attas.

In Pets and the City , Dr. Attas shares all the shocking, heartbreaking, and life-affirming experiences she’s faced throughout her 30-year career—like the time she saw a naked Cher (no, her rash was not the same as her puppy’s); when she met a skilled service dog who, after his exam was finished, left the room and returned with a checkbook in his mouth; and when she saved the life of a retired, agoraphobic Hollywood producer during a monthly treatment for his cat, Amos. In these moments Dr. Attas noticed key insights about animal, and human, nature—like how humans attach to one another through their love of animals, or how animals don’t have pride, ego, or vanity that their humans seem to value so much, sometimes to their detriment.

To Dr. Attas, she doesn’t just heal animals. She witnesses how they and their humans help and heal each other, and how the special bond between pet and owner might actually make us better people.

320 pages, Hardcover

First published June 18, 2024

143 people are currently reading
6972 people want to read

About the author

Amy Attas

2 books25 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
704 (38%)
4 stars
733 (39%)
3 stars
347 (18%)
2 stars
39 (2%)
1 star
10 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 354 reviews
Profile Image for Angela.
667 reviews251 followers
December 17, 2025
Pets and the City by Amy Attas

Synopsis /

Hilarious, jaw-dropping, and heartfelt stories from New York City’s premier “house-call veterinarian” that take you into the exclusive penthouses and 4-star hotel rooms of the wealthiest New Yorkers and show that, when it comes to their pets, they are just as neurotic as any of us.

When a pet is sick, people—even the rich and famous—are at their most authentic and vulnerable. They could have a Monet on the wall and an Oscar on the shelf, but if their cat gets a cold, all they want to talk about are snotty noses and sneezing fits. That’s when they call premier in-home veterinarian Dr. Amy Attas.

In Pets and the City , Dr. Attas shares all the shocking, heartbreaking, and life-affirming experiences she’s faced throughout her 30-year career—like the time she saw a naked Cher (no, her rash was not the same as her puppy’s); when she met a skilled service dog who, after his exam was finished, left the room and returned with a cheque book in his mouth; and when she saved the life of a retired, agoraphobic Hollywood producer during a monthly treatment for his cat, Amos. In these moments Dr. Attas noticed key insights about animal, and human, nature—like how humans attach to one another through their love of animals, or how animals don’t have pride, ego, or vanity that their humans seem to value so much, sometimes to their detriment.

To Dr. Attas, she doesn’t just heal animals. She witnesses how they and their humans help and heal each other, and how the special bond between pet and owner might actually make us better people.


My Thoughts /

rounded up to 3.5 🌟

In Pets and the City, Veterinarian, Dr Amy Attas regales the reader with tales of what a 'day-in-the-life' of an house-call veterinarian might look like.

From the time she was 10 years old, Amy Attas wanted to be a veterinarian. As a young teen, she tried to act on that idea by “shadowing” a couple of New York veterinarians but she couldn’t stop fainting.

She eventually overcame that hiccup, and….

After completing a competitive internship at the Animal Medical Centre, Dr Amy Attas began her first veterinary job in Manhattan at a very high end park avenue hospital. The learning curve, both in terms of veterinary medicine and about how the world works was steep, but Amy excelled at both those areas. So it came as a complete surprise to her when she was let go - told her pack up all her belongings and leave the premises immediately.

Buoyed by the fact that a lot of her human clients still wanted her as their family vet, Dr Amy Attas founded 'City Pets' back in 1992 after realising her 'animal clients' might prefer in-home care. Establishing such a unique mobile practice in New York City was a risk, but it was a risk that paid dividends.

This was a fun, easy read – albeit if you don't mind the incessant name dropping of well known celebrities. But kudos to Amy Attas – she found a want in the market, she filled it, and she's reaping the rewards.

Whether it's in a penthouse or a sub-basement, Attas regales the reader with her tales about pets and their owners.
Profile Image for Jeannine.
603 reviews32 followers
January 29, 2024
Every animal lover will definitely want to read Pets and the City.

This memoir is written by Dr Amy, a vet in NYC who is a concierge vet (comes to the person’s home). The book starts out with her background, her desire to become a vet, and how she got to where she is today. There are funny moments, a few tough ones, and a lot of hard work.

The rest of the memoir is anecdotes about her clients, organized thematically by chapter. So many funny tales, but also heartwarming ones about animals helping people and people doing anything for their pets. And also some crazy stories, celebrity pets, and downright wild scenarios. I also learned quite a bit about vet care by reading this!!

I have five cats. I’ve had dogs. Pets are amazing companions. I just loved this book and the time I got to spend with Dr Amy.

5 stars!!!!

Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for the opportunity to read an ARC of this book and provide an honest review. It was a pleasure. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Foxy Vixen.
316 reviews11 followers
August 27, 2025
Great non-fiction read. Live the life of a real life Veterinarian who makes house calls in NYC.
Yo can get some great medical advice for your cats and dogs. Tylenol is a NO NO for dogs and cats. No lilies of any kind for cats and much more.
Profile Image for Sue Em.
1,801 reviews121 followers
April 29, 2024
Marvelous book for all animal lovers full of heartwarming stories about people and their pets from a very special perspective of a vet with a 30 year practice of making house calls in Manhattan. And seeing pet/person relationships in action across all levels of society validates that pets help people as much as the obverse. Of course,the peek into celebrity pet township satisfies another reason to read this book. Thanks to netgalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Jenny Theis.
96 reviews
January 22, 2024
3.5 stars
There were so interesting stories in Dr. Amy Attas' Pets in the City. However, it was too preachy for my taste. Also, I realize part of the book was billed as getting to "see" the inside lives of the famous owners, but I quickly tired of the name dropping. I was here for the pets and who owned them didn't really matter.
Thank you for the opportunity to read Pets in the City.
Profile Image for Aleigh.
251 reviews
March 20, 2025
This was a fun & quick read about some of my favorite things - animals & wealthy New Yorkers! It was very entertaining to read about Dr. Amy's experience as an in-home vet to some of NYC's most successful people. She does a wonderful job of weaving together her life's journey in a very picturesque way and it was really fun reading about the people & pets she has met along the way!
Profile Image for Elizabeth O'Keefe.
965 reviews24 followers
October 4, 2024
Interesting read, but also one of those name dropping books, which slightly turned me off.

When I was a kid I wanted to be a Veterinarian, however, I learned I would have to put animals down and that broke my heart and so I went into business instead.

Getting the insight into a day in the life, and the making of a vet (if you will) was cool, however, it just got to be a bit eh in some parts.

Thank you NetGalley and publisher for my E-ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Maria.
3,001 reviews96 followers
July 17, 2024
As a pet owner and lover, this was a fascinating read. Dr. Amy Attas has encountered a myriad of issues with her various patients and it was interesting to read about each case and how they were handled. And occasionally, it wasn’t the pet that had to be handled but the owner, which she managed to do in a professional and courteous manner. There is quite a bit of namedropping but I enjoyed learning about the different stars’ pets and how she worked with the larger than life personalities.

I received a copy from #NetGalley for an honest review.
Profile Image for Lot.
174 reviews1 follower
February 7, 2025
Enig boek! Een hoop dierenliefde meets SATC
Ik heb gesmuld van de verhalen over de rich & famous van New York
Profile Image for Marlene.
3,446 reviews241 followers
June 27, 2024
Once upon a time in 1980, there was a book. To be fair, there’s always a book. But the book in this particular case was All My Patients Are Under the Bed by Louis J. Camuti. I still have a copy – even if one or more cats have gnawed on it a bit.

Dr. Camuti, like Dr. Attas, the author of Pets and the City, was a house call veterinarian in Manhattan, in the decades before Dr. Attas finished her training. Dr. Camuti’s practice was just a bit different, however, even for his own time, as he was one of the first vets to specialize in cats.

Dr. Attas, taking up, or finding herself in, her own visiting vet service in Manhattan, takes on all comers, as the stories in her book joyously and sometimes heartbreakingly attest.

To paraphrase the classic Law and Order intro, so apropos because that series is also set in NYC, these are her stories – and the stories of the animals and their people that she has treated along her way.

Reality Rating B: The author does several things in this collection of cat tales and not-necessarily-shaggy dog stories. First she tells her own tale, her origin story, not just how and why she became a vet, but how she fell – or was pushed, she was definitely pushed – into opening her peripatetic Manhattan practice.

Second, she tells oodles of sometimes funny, sometimes sad, occasionally downright heartbreaking stories about the animals – and their people – that she treated along the way. Those stories, even when they absolutely break your heart as they did hers, are THE BEST part of the whole book.

Even if the dogs did outnumber the cats.

Howsomever, as the blurb implies that there will be stories of the rich and famous of Manhattan, the third thing is that there is more than a bit of name-dropping. Unfortunately that part of her story is already starting to seem a bit dated as some of her early famous clients – as ultra-famous as a few of them were back in their day – have since passed away in the decades since Dr. Attas’ career began.

And occasionally the author gets up on her soapbox about animal and/or pet-related causes that are near and dear to her heart. But as this book is squarely aimed at animal lovers of all types and stripes and spots, most readers will empathize with her convictions.

To make a not very long story even shorter, Pets and the City, as much as the title titillates with its resemblance to Sex and the City, isn’t really about the rich and famous, and doesn’t dish dirty secrets on some of the city’s more famous and/or infamous residents. So if that’s what you are here for, this probably isn’t the book for you.

Also if you’re really, really, seriously a cat lover, the dogs are definitely having their day in this book. Personally, I always want more cat stories but the dogs ARE adorable – even when something noxious is gushing out of one of their orifices.

Ultimately, Pets and the City is a collection of (true but the names have been changed to protect the guilty) stories about the pets whose people live and work in Manhattan. No matter how palatial – or how down at heel – the place where their person lives and/or work, it’s the pets and THEIR stories that always takes center stage.

Which is exactly how it should be.

Originally published at Reading Reality
358 reviews
October 9, 2024
Anyone who loves their pet will love this book. Lots of great stories about Dr. Amy's patients -- and their owners!
Profile Image for Stacey E. .
587 reviews36 followers
December 24, 2023
I loved this! As a housecall pet groomer, I related so much to the experiences and relationships made by going to people's homes rather than seeing them in a work environment. You really bond with your clients and pets on a more personal level. I loved hearing Dr. Amy's stories and even found myself getting emotional for some. Not everyone is cut out for housecall, but for those who are, it's the best job in the world!
Thank you, NetGalley, Penguin Group, and G.P. Putnam's Sons for the opportunity to read and review this advanced copy.
Profile Image for Kim Coenen.
2,156 reviews68 followers
October 25, 2024
Ik ben dol op non-fictie boeken en daarbij ben ik ook een grote dierenvriend. Hierdoor leek dit nieuwe boek van Amy Attas echt een ontzettend leuk en veelbelovend boek. Van Uitgeverij The House of Books ontving ik een recensie-exemplaar en heb ik het geluk dat ik van dit prachtige boek mag gaan genieten. Ik heb hoge verwachtingen.


Mensen zijn op hun kwetsbaars als het om hun zieke huisdier gaat. Of ze nu een Monet aan de muur hebben hangen of meerdere Oscars in hun kast hebben staan, als hun kat verkouden is of hun hond moet overgeven draait de wereld voor hen ook enkel en alleen om hun huisdier. Amy Attas, vertelt als Dierenarts in New York, de meest schokkende, hartverscheurende en hilarische verhalen die ze in de afgelopen dertig jaar als dierenarts mee maakte. Van één ding is ze zeker: huisdieren zijn niet alleen super schattig, ze maken ons ook tot betere mensen.


Wat een heerlijk, spraakmakend en leuk boek. Amy Attas heeft een hele persoonlijke, heldere en vlotte schrijfstijl en weet haar verhalen met smaak en gevoel op je over te brengen. Ze weet de verschillende situaties en gebeurtenissen levendig te verwoorden en ook haar eigen gevoel bij de situatie en gebeurtenis te verwoorden.

Het boek bevat een verzameling van heel uiteenlopende en diverse verhalen die Amy als dierenarts meemaakte. De verhalen variëren van schokkend, verbazingwekkend, bizar, hilarisch en hartverscheurend. Ze weet hierin een heerlijke mix te maken van verhalen met verschillende emoties die elkaar afwisselen, waardoor ieder verhaal weer een genot is om te lezen. Door de diversiteit blijf je als lezer ook nieuwsgierig en geboeid naar het volgende verhaal. Wat zal dit nu weer gaan brengen?

Naast de diverse verhalen die Amy meemaakt als dierenarts, vertelt ze niet enkel over haar honden- en kattenpatiënten, maar doet ze ook een boekje open over de verschillende baasjes en hun reacties op de situatie. Ook komt hierbij het privéleven, de impact op Amy zelf en haar eigen praktijk aan bod. Hierdoor krijg je een veelzijdige kijk hoe het er in het leven van Amy als dierenarts aan toe gaat. Het is leuk dat Amy als rode draad ook verschillende levenslessen opdoet en ziet wat de impact van dieren op mensen brengt. Ook dit weet ze helder en krachtig te verwoorden in haar boek.

Dierenarts in New York is een ontzettend leuke, grappige en ontroerende verzameling van heel uiteenlopende verhalen die Amy door de jaren heen als dierenarts heeft opgedaan. Ze vertelt niet enkel en alleen over haar patiënten, maar ook over hun baasjes, haar eigen dierenartspraktijk en haar privéleven. Daarbij zijn de verhalen heerlijk divers en uiteenlopend. Echt een ontzettend leuke aanrader voor iedere dierenliefhebber.
Profile Image for CatReader.
1,038 reviews184 followers
October 5, 2025
Dr. Amy Attas is a New York-city based veterinarian with a high-end concierge practice style in which she almost exclusively makes house calls. As I'm sure the fees for this level of service are much higher than standard vet practices, she's attracted a celebrity and otherwise well-to-do clientele, as she narrates in her 2024 memoir Pets and City.

As a lifelong cat lover, I'm simultaneously attracted to books like these while also wary of reading them as stories of animals suffering are probably my only nonfiction trigger. There are plenty of upsetting stories in the book, as well as many hopeful ones, with, as expected, the human characters being the villains most often. Dr. Attas seems to particularly relish in celebrity namedrops, talking about times where she's done ridiculous favors in hopes of meeting a particularly celebrity pet owner, in a way that also implies that non-famous pet owners would never receive the same deference. I didn't come for the salacious gossip, and this attitude was a turn-off to me. I also have a theory that anytime a memoirist tells a particularly unflattering story about how they met and got together with their spouse/romantic partner (like in this book), even if they are still ostensibly together, there are definitely marital issues still at play.

My statistics:
Book 304 for 2025
Book 2230 cumulatively
Profile Image for Laura Lewakowski.
656 reviews26 followers
February 8, 2025
A fun read! What an interesting job for a devoted animal lover. It made me happy that she was as successful as she was (is?) starting from an idea and a spouse who supported her.
Profile Image for Beth.
797 reviews
September 7, 2025
4.5
Dr. Amy Attas is a New York City veterinarian who makes house calls and, being an animal lover, I enjoyed reading about her visits. Often times to the rich and famous with many great tales of domesticated furry friends and animal welfare.
Profile Image for Berber.
16 reviews
November 5, 2025
Leuk boek met waargebeurde verhalen. Niet heel bijzonder maar leuk om elke dag even wat in te lezen.
14 reviews
September 1, 2025
Boek leest heerlijk weg, leuke verhaallijnen, af en toe verbaas je je flink over hoe mensen met huisdieren omgaan
Profile Image for Rachel.
27 reviews
March 30, 2025
I enjoyed this a lot! Almost as much as all my patients are under the bed, though that one is hard to beat as I am a cat lover and love hearing all the cat stories in that. Great stories in this and still learned some stuff too!
7 reviews
December 1, 2025
Enjoyed every minute of this book. Exactly what I needed after recently losing my furry friend. Thank you Dr. Attas for sharing these beautiful stories!
Profile Image for Emma.
362 reviews5 followers
February 28, 2024
If you’re an animal lover, this book is for you! Dr. Amy Attas shares her experience as a veterinarian in NYC - from growing up & deciding that’s what she wanted to do to her first job to opening her own at-home veterinary care practice. Her stories were not only about the pets, but frequently featured the humans behind the pets (including the rich & famous !!). From hilarious “can you believe this” anecdotes to the heartbreaking side of pet death/illness, Attas holds nothing back in this memoir.

Thank you to NetGalley for the ARC!
1,699 reviews
September 17, 2024
Started really strong. I LOVED the first ~ 30% and thought this would be a 4 or 5 star read. Loved hearing how Dr. Attas cared for animals as a child and her early days as a vet. Even enjoyed the early interactions with pets and clients. I absolutely think a house call veterinarian is a great idea. If I didn’t love my vet and had access to one I would consider using one. As the story went on, there were a lot of pets with cancer and many other things that went awry that gave me a ton of pet parent anxiety. Perhaps the author truly sees a lot of cancer. It just felt proportionally high. That would have been OK. What started to rub me the wrong way were two things:
1. The constant name dropping of celebrity clients
2. The tone felt judgmental and preachy about lapses in judgement, care of a pet or things a client did
If people let you into their home, you are witness to their vulnerabilities. Yes, you might overhear, see and encounter things you don’t want to know.

I really struggled with the tone about care of some pets. I support the author’s attempt to educate pet parents. But I felt anxiety that I would make such a mistake and/or be judged by my vet. Was also bothered by the story of a pet parent choosing not to neuter his dog and the discussion with the co-owner about implants. Felt very unethical.


OVerall this was a miss. Am very grateful for the care my vet gives my pet and for never feeling judged by the team.
Profile Image for Megan Nix.
48 reviews
June 23, 2024
A wonderful collection of tales (tails?) of a house call veterinarian in NYC. Her clients include some celebrities and high society. Some funny, some sad, and some heartbreaking stories are shared. Every pet owner needs to read.
Profile Image for Sasha.
1,394 reviews
January 18, 2025
If you can get through the name-dropping (Cher, Billy Joel, Ivanna Trump, Tommy Tune, Joan Rivers), this book is really interesting if you are interested in the care of sick animals. Some of the stories were very interesting.
Profile Image for Stephanie A..
2,930 reviews95 followers
April 9, 2025
An entertaining book full of great stories about the lifestyles of the rich and/or famous...at least through the lens of coming to care for their pets (don't be misled, the animal patients are definitely still the focus).

Although from what I can tell she's about a decade younger than Dr. Kritsick, I'm so glad I read Creature Comforts: The Adventures of a City Vet recently, purposely to pair with this one, because it covers some familiar ground, including The Animal Medical Center. I was rather tickled to recognize the study on feline injuries after falls from high rises (based on patient data, not an experiment!), for one.

But then her path diverges into very private practice, which offers an interesting angle you don't see very often in vet memoirs, house call visits normally being reserved for horses & livestock. Those visits are interesting on their own whether her clients are famous or not (though I must say, none of the more famous showbiz names made my eyes turn as starry as they did for "Isabelle Holland, the writer.").

There are a few sad stories, but for the most part it's not too much of a tearjerker, though there's one story that got me good: the elderly woman who basically lost the will to live after her equally elderly poodle died, and was in fast decline...until Attas presented her with a new rescue poodle in need of care.

Bottom line: recommended!
Profile Image for Beth.
396 reviews
September 29, 2025
There were many interesting stories in this book and the first half was very good. However, the second half started to get on my nerves.

The author moved from mild opinions about pets and pet care to sanctimonious and judgmental opinions (sorry, but pets are not the same as people).

There was a lot of name dropping and stories about famous people. I was very turned off by the lifestyles and attitudes of the ultra wealthy and the regular wealthy. I was also turned off by the author’s praising of herself for treating all her clients equally while demanding that she and her husband were too good/important to sit at the “bad” table at a snobby restaurant.

I’m also surprised that her clients were okay with her publishing these (often unflattering) stories about them. It seems like a pretty big invasion of privacy to share these stories. And weird that she also repeatedly told the reader what a great non-judgmental person she is for keeping her clients’ confidentiality and not judging their life choices. 🤔
14 reviews
April 29, 2025
Really didn't know what to expect and while it wasn't a book that held me on the edge of my seat with cliffhangers, I enjoyed these stories so much. If you've ever been loved by a pet, you'll enjoy this. It's effectively a series of short stories that encapsulates some of her career, both the highs and the lows. Definitely makes you give extra pets and treats 💜
Profile Image for Stephanie Fitzgerald.
1,205 reviews
June 27, 2025
Wow! A book about an in-home veterinarian, whose clients and their “parents” are all residents in the City That Never Sleeps. I read it in one day, because I couldn’t put it down! At turns hilarious, then heart-rending, with lots of “How cool is that!” moments, this one is a must-read for all pet parents!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 354 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.