This is a sweet story with beautiful illustrations, though it may pull at your heartstrings a bit too much, so keep the tissues near. I read this a week after putting down my vigilant protector, Nina, far too early. The book focuses on traditional things dogs do and don't like (treats, shoes, baths, tricks), so there are parts that will be easy to relate to your own pooch while others miss the mark (i.e. Nina didn't like baths, while Blaine does; Nina loved all treats, Blaine is more picky). It's still a quick, about twenty minutes, and comforting read, and I think I'd recommend it to anyone dealing with the recent loss of a beloved dog. It's so easy to be wrapped up in the "what if's" and the guilt, but this book reminds us that all a dog wants to do is love us and make us happy. They love us at our best, and our worst. And they wouldn't want the adventures to stop, the happiness to end. It's sweet, touching, moving, comforting, and sometimes it's nice to suspend belief just enough to imagine that the message is coming from your companion, nudging you forward to heal or giving you hope that one day you'll be prepared for another adventure that'll end in the same heartbreak. Because it's beautiful, because it's worth it, because they're always by our side.