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Have Dog, Will Travel: A Poet's Journey

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In a lyrical love letter to guide dogs everywhere, a blind poet shares his delightful story of how a guide dog changed his life and helped him discover a newfound appreciation for travel and independence.Stephen Kuusisto was born legally blind—but he was also raised in the 1950s and taught to deny his blindness in order to "pass" as sighted. Stephen attended public school, rode a bike, and read books pressed right up against his nose. As an adult, he coped with his limited vision by becoming a professor in a small college town, memorizing routes for all of the places he needed to be. Then, at the age of 38, he was laid off. With no other job opportunities in his vicinity, he would have to travel to find work. This is how he found himself at Guiding Eyes paired with a Labrador named Corky. In this vivid and lyrical memoir, Stephen Kuusisto recounts how an incredible partnership with a guide dog changed his life and the heart-stopping, wondrous adventure that began for him in midlife. Profound and deeply moving, this is a spiritual journey, the story of discovering that life with a guide dog is both a method and a state of mind.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published March 13, 2018

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Stephen Kuusisto

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 189 reviews
Profile Image for Evelina | AvalinahsBooks.
925 reviews472 followers
March 19, 2018
Have Dog, Will Travel by Stephen Kuusisto is an incredibly touching love song to dogs – not just guide dogs as a means for a person to be enabled, to experience so much more freedom, but simply the ever loving nature of these wonderful creatures and how they can transform a person's life. You will not simply finish this book and walk away. It will lodge itself into the depth of your heart and never let you go. ★★★★✬ 4.5 stars.

Stephen Kuusisto should have been declared legally blind as a child – the only reason he wasn't was because his parents thought their child would have a very hard life if he was considered blind. So they told him to hide it, to pretend (it's a common misconception that all blind people don't see at all – a person can be legally blind and see shapes or read text with the page right in their face.) How Stephen managed to live half of his life this way and even teach students remains a mystery to me – nothing short of a miracle. But the real miracle in his life isn't the fact that he spent half of it pretending to be able to see just fine – it's the fact that one day he had enough. And that's when he decided to request a seeing eye dog. And it changed EVERYTHING.


Have Dog, Will Travel is the story of this change. And it's nothing short of amazing. The story goes through the exhillaration of freedom, freedom of movement, freedom of choice, so many freedoms suddenly within Stephen's grasp. But it's not just that. It's also the freedom to love and be loved. The freedom to be allowed to be yourself. To accept yourself. And to learn to find your footing.

Read more about how guide dogs give the blind people more freedom and loving acceptance in my full review on my book blog here. There you will also find more from this book about how you should NOT treat a blind person and generally avoid being ableist.

I thank Simon & Schuster for giving me a free copy of the book in exchange to my honest opinion. Receiving the book for free does not affect my opinion.

Read Post On My Blog | My Bookstagram | Bookish Twitter
Profile Image for Hákon Gunnarsson.
Author 29 books162 followers
January 29, 2020
Have Dog, Will Travel is an autobiographical account by Stephen Kuusisto of getting an seeing eye dog for the first time. Kuusisto was legally blind at an early age, but his mother insisted that he would hide his disability from the world. It is only after he looses a teaching job at the age of thirty-eight, and has a hard time getting a new one that he starts thinking about getting a dog to help him.

I like this book for most parts. It is a very interesting view into the world of blind people, and the history of seeing eye dogs in America. I feel like I gained insight into that history by reading this. It has been an uphill battle for blind people's freedom getting the right to use these amazing animals. It is also the first time I have heard how people, and seeing eye dogs really work together. I've been a dog owner for decades, but those dogs have mostly been without any job to speak of, so those relationship are a little bit different.

Kuusisto's personal history is quite interesting. He had a rough time growing up, partly because his mother insisted on him hiding his blindness from the world. It sounds really strange, but maybe not unique. This obviously had some direct consequences on his life, and he makes it quite clear that his life got better after starting to "show" his blindness by having an seeing eye dog.

He does get into some situations after going out into world with his canine helper. People have their own ideas about what blindness is, and how having it must be. Some of this is not coming from a bad place, rather out of ignorance, but some of it is prejudices against blind people. This bugs the writer, and he spends quite some time trying to show how these prejudices are wrong. What is a little strange, is that he sometimes shows his own prejudices against some groups of people so casually that I'm not sure if he noticed doing it, but that is another story.

His writing style is light most of the time, sometimes quite funny, and I laughed out loud several times, but occasionally he becomes little too sentimental for my liking. Still I liked it. It is a good book, an interesting view into the world of seeing eye dogs.
Profile Image for Nikki (Saturday Nite Reader).
476 reviews112 followers
October 20, 2017

I received a free copy of this ebook from NetGalley for my honest review.

I was healing from a wounding failure to love my blindness.

The author, Stephen Kuusisto, grew up hiding the fact that he was blind. It was not something easily hidden, but it was more a lack of acknowledgement and accommodation of his disability by his mother. He never knew how to embrace his disability, having been forced to hide it. For the first time at the age of 38, he would finally acknowledge his disability and start his journey to acceptance and independence. His life would change after he chose to get a service dog, who would give him the confidence he needed to find his way in the world.

In the condensed version of guide-dog life, all at once everything is reachable. Reachable is a word sighted people rarely have to think about – but it’s one of the main coordinates of independence.

The book is written in way that you feel you are sitting in a coffee shop with Stephen and he is telling you about his story. It is very honest and real. I learned new ways of thinking about situations, not just involving disabilities, but how to be kind to all people. There are a few stories where Stephen could have easily been angry with those less tolerant of his disability, but he chose to diffuse the situations with kindness; the one thing the author portrayed was patience. He was often in situations where his conversations revolved around his disability, and further questioning about Corky’s role in aiding him. Because of his disability many people have treated him like he was less of a person. Not realizing that Stephen is person, just because he is disabled it doesn’t mean he can’t still think, have opinions and contribute to society.

I was in the dining room at a prestigious arts retreat, in a room where Yoko Ono once ate spaghetti and instead of discussing the arts I was describing light – that blind can often see it, that many see colors. And that those who don’t see anything at all still understand the world richly.

He had a beautiful relationship with Corky, and you learn just how much training and love goes into the process of training both the dogs and those in need of a guide dog. If anything, I learned so much of the training process and that these dogs are professionals and not pets and often need to be treated very differently by outsiders; the book describes the reasons why and Stephen provided many examples of situations he and Corky were in that give perspective to their working relationship.

Many books about service animals suggest they heal wounded people but this is a bit of a misrepresentation. Disabilities never vanish. What a dog can do is entice you back into the world.

Corky gave Stephen confidence. They both relied on each other. Corky was there to help guide Stephen and look out for dangers, but Stephen had to be in the lead. Guide dogs do not choose directions or make decisions, they take the lead from their owner.

Stephen, through his words, is a voice for those who are struggling as he did early on. He is proof that if you open yourself up to love, you will receive love in return. Corky sounds like an amazing dog, thank you for sharing your story.
Profile Image for Stephen Wallace.
853 reviews104 followers
December 21, 2025
I enjoyed the book. Interesting to put yourself in the perspective of someone severely visually impaired. Great to see him go from living isolated from the world to having the world open up to him by sharing his life with a service dog. I will share a few quotes I liked that can give you a feel of the book.


‘"We want our applicants to have good travel skills to show they can make sound choices while walking,” he said.
“But doesn't the guide dog do those things?” | asked. “No,” Dave said, “A guide dog assists you moving from place to place but you have to know how to set the compass. Otherwise a guide dog is just a faster way to get lost!” I laughed, envisioning people with no idea where they might be going, all attached to fast-moving dogs.’

Overcoming low self esteem contributed to by having an alcoholic mother is a big factor in the story of his life. This next excerpt gives you and idea of what his mother thought of him and his condition:

“I'm getting a guide dog,” I said. My voice was high and happy—in effect I was a child saying “I’m getting a puppy!
“Oh,” she said, “I think that’s a dreadful idea.”
“Dreadful how?” I asked.
“People will know you're on the fritz,” she said.
“On the fritz?” I repeated. “You mean like a household appliance?”
“Yes,” she said, “you should never let people see youre defective. They'll think less of you.” I announced I was excited and said she should think about that. Then I hung up.

Hope and growth always makes for a good story.

‘I waited in my room and imagined a map—a “might be” map of life to come, what if the future would be, okay? What if it would be truly lovely? What if having g guide dog “worked” for me? I saw these were the Proper things to think about.’

‘“With your dog,” she said, “the whole thing is fluid because she sees things and adjusts without breaking stride. And when I walk with my sighted friends I'm always faster than they are. Sighted people can’t keep up.’

I also like hearing about training.

““We teach our puppy raisers that the handler and the dog must maintain awareness of each other at all times when they're together,” he said. “Either handler or dog may be engaged in something else while still maintaining awareness. Awareness is demonstrated by response to a change in the other. For instance, the handler should notice if a dog moves or changes focus; the dog notices if the handler moves or alters his actions.”
“Does this eventually become natural?” I asked. “Exactly. Mutual awareness becomes a way of life,” said Jack. “And when a puppy grows up and comes back for its adult training—its guide-dog education—the dog will focus ‘right in’ on his or her person.”’

Some things in his writing didn’t work as well for me. Before I say anything that is somewhat critical, I want to say I overall liked the book, and completing and having your book published is a major accomplishment. As I have not done to work to get bloodied in the arena of the publishing world, I wonder what right I have to quibble. I like to share my thoughts on his thoughts and style so I will blunder on with some thoughts.

In spite of his limitations, he is well educated. Like me, he likes quotes and relatively often shares some in the book. I think he wants to share thoughts that match up with his and that are well said, but sometimes if he just had expressed his own thoughts that would have been enough. There are also other times when he strives to express his thoughts in a lofty way but felt like he was trying too hard. Here are some examples. The reference to Helen Keller worked for me, and I love the mental image referring to maps. Not so sure about some other quotes.


‘In college I once jotted down a sentiment by Helen Keller: Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence. I’d copied her lines because I was uncertain about their accuracy. I thought Keller was a version of Pollyanna. Now I saw I'd failed to recognize how hope and conviction are like a map’s coordinates. Helen Keller, Cartographer, I wrote in my notebook during “down time” between walks.’


‘I knew she loved me but recognized her affection was unrestrainedly alien. Human love is always balloonish, sentimental, but a dog’s—well, it’s primal, with a pulse, steady. She's asked you in, given you parts of her heart. Some energies she keeps. And her life isn't given to cosseted, overindulgent sweet talk, though she likes it well enough. The mysteries of her love and fast intelligence will never be knowable. I learned to like this as she guided me through streets I couldn’t see.’


‘Corky lay beside the open door scenting the breeze. We sat side by side in the growing dusk. Wind stirred the maples.
Our companionship was intimate and richer than poems.
With every walk she found dancing leaves or raindrops, lizards, flowers. And me? I profited, standing in the grass, knowing of my smallness in the scheme of things—and it all felt good.’

And for those who want to know if the dog dies in the end… yes, the book extends beyond a period of the dogs life. But it is not covered in a painful way. He gives us his thought on his dog’s passing:

‘One day your dog is with you, a keen physical presence. She stands under lilac bushes as reliable as always, the next day she’s gone. She becomes, finally, something of you. Every death is just so. We look for consolation. We falter. With grace we're turned, and loss is yet another segment of our path.’

So, nice book I would still recommend, but one less star for the nitpickings I mentioned. Quick read and worth your time to step into the shoes of someone different than your own. Inspiring to see how far he went in his life with the partnership of a service dog.
Profile Image for Stephanie Masta.
72 reviews2 followers
January 12, 2023
what a wonderful, heartwarming book. very calm and peaceful. must read if you love dogs.
Profile Image for Christie Bane.
1,478 reviews24 followers
December 12, 2018
This is not your typical guide-dog-handler memoir. I don’t know of any other author who is also a guide dog handler who is also a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and also a poet. Actually, the sound of poetry just behind the prose is what caused me to give this book four stars instead of five. I prefer writing that is direct and dirty as opposed to crafted. Still, this was the story of working with and being transformed by a guide dog that is unlike any other I’ve ever read. It’s a worthy addition to the guide dog canon.
Profile Image for Samantha Harding.
51 reviews
July 31, 2023
Nice intro to blindness. Blind people are normal. “You’re only as independent as infrastructure allows.”
66 reviews
September 9, 2018
Best book I’ve read in a while. It’s short, but not inconsequential. Stephen is a poet and so he crafts this story well, there’s poetry in his prose. It’s not just a book about a man and a dog, it’s about life, about finding how to continue to live when faced with challenges large and small. How to treat others with patience and kindness. And about the joys of sharing life with a dog, both as a companion and as a guide.
Profile Image for Brittany.
28 reviews
May 28, 2025
Calling all dog lovers: Guide/service dog handlers, instructors, trainers, puppy raisers/foster families, veterinary staff, kennel attendants, groomers, volunteers, any and all of you dog-loving people!

I often like to pull a quote from the book to start out my review, but there were simply too many in this memoir to be able to choose one. This is the story of a legally blind man getting his first guide dog and, in the process, learning to see the world more clearly and expansively for the first time in his 38 years of life — no vision required. (Is that cheesy? Yes, and I don’t care; I’m feeling nostalgic over this one.)

Have Dog, Will Travel: A Poet’s Journey transported me back to my days as a Guide Dog Mobility Instructor apprentice and flooded me with memories of blindfold walks and Juno walks; the fun of classes and training; of moments of pride and achievement and celebration with dogs and clients alike; of moments of frustration and disappointment and heartbreak; and specifically, of all the times we reminded our clients to “always trust your dog”. I didn’t work at this particular guide dog school, but I might as well have — even the instructor, Linda, with her good humour, reminded me of an old mentor of mine.

I was sincerely rooting for Steve and Corky throughout their journey. I laughed and cried along with them in their triumphs and their challenges (and at the strange things we sighted people do and say in the face of blindness). I even fist-pumped over their first ever traffic check.

Even if you know nothing about working dogs (or dogs in general), the author explains everything simply and clearly, so the reader can easily understand and even pick up some of the guide dog terminologies too. And if you are a part of the guide/assistance dog community in whatever way, shape, or form, you’ll likely still find that you learn a thing or two from this book.

If you’ve ever wondered how someone learns to navigate the world with low- or no vision, what the processes are in order to receive a guide dog, what the training consists of, or what it’s like to place your trust and safety — your life — into the paws of a very capable animal, this book is for you. It even offers a nice overview of the history of guide dogs and the long, ongoing fight for disability rights (specifically the ADA, as this is an American author) without being dry, boring, or long-winded.

Uplifting, thoughtful, hopeful, touching, and absolutely brimming with optimism (not to mention informative), I loved everything about this memoir!

So, you know what? I will include a quote:
I waited in my room and imagined a map—a “might be” map of life to come. What if the future would be okay? What if it would be truly lovely? What if having a guide dog “worked” for me? I saw these were the proper things to think about. And then my name was called via loudspeaker and it was my turn to meet Corky.

And another (for the puppy raisers):
There was a transmission of love behind our triumphs. People had loved Corky and fed her, housed her, laughed with her, and then, when their bond was deepest, they gave her back to the school. The act had a purity about it—a quality one may call rejoicing. I could feel it. I who’d spent my days taking unhappiness too much to heart.

And another:
What do you call a love collective featuring dogs and blind people? Did it matter if there was no term for it? Sometimes walking a hallway with Corky I’d hear singing from a dorm room. Women sang to their dogs and so did men. Love was palpable. Dogs were deciding to accept new people in room after room. The dogs weren’t merely giving their new owners the benefit of the doubt, they were giving them their faith. Dogs can tell when your heart is open—can tell when you’re dignifying them with your trust. Dogs smell trust.

Just one more, I swear (about the founders of The Seeing Eye in the U.S.A.):
[Dorothy] Eustis called [Morris] Frank and invited him to Fortunate Fields, her dog-training school in Switzerland.
He replied: “Mrs. Eustis, to get my independence back, I’d go to hell.”
Profile Image for Jessica White.
498 reviews40 followers
January 9, 2018
So Stephen Kuusisto was born blind in one eye and soon lost vision in the other eye.
For 38 years, Stephen pretended he could see. He pretended he was normal. He graduated, went to college, and became a professor, all while pretending he didn't have a disability.
See when he was growing up, people viewed disabilities as a disease. They didn't know how to react or speak to those with disabilities. So he had no choice but to mask his disability.
But once his teaching gig didn't last forever, he decided his life needed a new turn, one that could ultimately change his life for the better.
He was getting a service dog.
He had to go through intensive training in order to get his very own service dog.
In Have Dog, Will Travel, Stephen outlines what was included in his training, as well as the training that the dogs have to go through, starting in their puppy days.
He also talks about the stigma that goes along with blindness. He talks about the stress of putting your life in the hands of a dog, but once that dog becomes your lifelong partner, there is no hesitation. That dog is going to protect you with their life because that is what they are trained to do.

Huge thank you to NetGalley for providing me with a copy of Have Dog, Will Travel!
Even bigger thanks to Stephen Kuusisto for writing this fantastic book that helped me better understand service dogs!

Have Dog, Will Travel hits shelves March 13th!

Looking for other books on service dogs?
Try:
The Dog Lover Unit
Profile Image for Nick Aaron.
Author 29 books51 followers
March 22, 2018
This memoir is beautifully written. Being blind is not sad. Apart from all else, Stephen Kuusisto preaches this by example: when you’re a talented poet and you’re capable of writing in such an undramatic yet compelling voice, you have no reason to be sad.
And the stories about Corky are just wonderful. Conveying the reality of living and working with a guide dog in a very imaginative way, the author brings it alive completely.
Simply a great read!
Profile Image for Renée.
Author 6 books39 followers
November 6, 2021
FIVE PAWS: Stephen Kuusisto's "Have Dog, Will Travel: A Poet’s Journey with an Exceptional Labrador" has taken its spot as one of my all-time favorite dog books. Profoundly moving and beautifully written.
Profile Image for Sarah Elizabeth.
599 reviews6 followers
October 1, 2018
This book taught me to appreciate poets in a new way. I will admit poetry has never been a favorite of mine, but reading a novel by a poet was a lovely experience. The beginning was an adjustment for me (I found it a little flowery), but I was intrigued by the story and kept reading. The author is blind, and this book is the story of his relationship with his guide dog, Corky. In the course of reading this book, I learned guide dogs were a consequence of war, which I found fascinating. They were used in war for a variety of tasks, but post-WWI, the first guide dogs actually emerged to help blind veterans in Germany.

One of the things the author discussed at length was how Corky gave him freedom and a way to accept himself (he had grown up deeply ashamed of being blind). He also discussed how being blind isn't his entire personality, but people he meets often only want to discuss that (even at an art retreat, other artists wanted to discuss being blind when he wanted to discuss Jackson Pollack). My mother taught deaf kids how to swim, and is fluent in sign language (no one in our family is deaf). Even today, she still signs while watching movies or television, and I remember watching her hands when I was little and being mesmerized by how quickly her fingers could form unique shapes and make meaning. Because of that experience, deaf and blind individuals don't seem unusual to me. Yes, they are different in that they have trouble hearing and seeing, but at their core, they aren't any different from anyone else.

When the author learns how to work with his guide dog, he expresses the following thought:
"From this moment on you will be saying ‘Good dog’ as much as a hundred times a day.” Who affirms good things even a dozen times a day? Who makes “talking goodness” a habit of her or his minutes?" I loved this because of how true it is and how great a reminder it is--make affirmations and talking goodness a habit!

I also found this interesting: "I like myself better with Corky. Does America’s love of dogs help when it comes to being in public with a disability? Yes. Dogs are icebreakers; they’re tribal totems; they transform space. Am I entirely better off because I have a dog? Probably not . . . Note to self: be careful not to anthropomorphize your dog, not to idealize her. But do acknowledge your trust. Foolish not to." Because I love dogs so much, I probably do idealize them. That he has such a strong bond with his dog and can still have this perspective was interesting.


One of the other things I liked about this book was how open the author was about his thoughts and feelings. After he gets Corky: "“This must be what sighted people feel like,” I thought as we climbed a steep hill. “You’re just you.” The idea was both banal and oddly original. “You’re just you, or we’re just us,” I said aloud." It brought to light (no pun intended) how much we take for granted with our eyesight. We can go to Walgreen's at midnight because we can't sleep. We can peruse a milliner's shop just because we have nothing better to do.


I also liked this: "Many books about service animals suggest they heal wounded people, but this is a bit of a misrepresentation. Disabilities never vanish. What a dog can do is entice you back into the world. That’s how a dog thinks of it." He also noted, "A guide dog taught me to live wisely."

I don't know how someone can read these words and not fall in love with man's best friend. As with most dog books, though, the ending was bittersweet. He said, "But in the veterinary clinic as she was breathing her last I knew quite clearly Corky had spent her life protecting me. She always looked out for me, my special angel. I knew I had to force back my tears because I couldn’t let her die to the sounds of my distress." I thought it was especially poignant that he didn't want to cry to protect Corky, since she had spent her entire life protecting him. It was also a nice perspective because I don't know that I've ever thought about the impact of my tears on a dog.

A very moving read, and one I would absolutely recommend.
Profile Image for Bajidc.
767 reviews5 followers
November 5, 2022
“The art of pretending to see.” My mother is an expert at that. Retinitis pigmentosa is a rare eye disease that causes vision loss over time. Her vision has been deteriorating for decades. Unless she had a companion, night blindness curtailed all evening activities. Eventually, her loss of peripheral vision meant she could no longer drive or even confidently walk alone. While we have become accustomed to it and she has found ways to live with it, it’s very hard for others to understand the concept of being nearly blind.

Kuusisto’s account is harrowing and upsetting but uplifting and life-affirming as well. Despite the savage upbringing courtesy of harsh parents who demanded he deny his condition, he learns to accept his blindness. A poet by trade, he takes us on a beautiful journey from his insular life in a familiar and small town to adventurous travels through this vast country thanks to the skills and love of his guide dog Corky. That his journey also includes a shift in attitude, gratitude, and self-acceptance is not lost on him. This lyrical memoir is understandably sentimental but also gives you a brass tacks overview on how the blind navigate the physical world and try to retain their dignity in the face of the prejudices or ignorance of others. The professionalism and competence of well-trained guide dogs is admirable and fascinating. Thanks for the recommendation, work-related-book-club-that-I-won’t-join-but-will-stalk!

Superb blurb:

Corky and I stood for nothing other than brokenness to loose cannon Christians. On a bus one day a woman said loudly: “Can I pray for you?” I couldn’t help myself and said very loudly: “Yes, Madam, you may pray for me, but only if together we raise our prayers for all the good people on this bus who have trouble brewing in their DNA, whose cancers are aborning even as we speak, whose children have gone astray through substance abuse, who are even now feeling lost in a sea of troubles, let us pray, all of us together for our universal salvation.” I clutched the woman’s arm with feverish intensity. The bus pulled to a routine stop and she jumped out the door. Passengers applauded. “Don’t take it personally,” a woman said to me then. I smiled. But how else to take it? The blind man either needs salvation or he’s a sign of grace. Can’t a fellow simply say: “I’m cheery in my flesh, how about you?”

Profile Image for Amyiw.
2,820 reviews68 followers
June 25, 2018
4 1/2
I want to give this a 5 but the end lost me in a bit too much philosophy. I don't think I've gotten there in life, maybe I never will. Still the first 80% was very good, great at many points, thought provoking, humorous, life changing (for him), and bit of thought on life and life choices, how we see ourselves and how this can change. I laughed quite a bit and thought quite a bit. I never have known a blind person really. I have a friend with very poor near vision but can drive. He is discriminated with jobs. Still a blind person that cannot easily travel in a new situation or area, no not really. After reading this I feel like a get a bit more of what it means. I also now know why you shouldn't pet a guide dog. I've met a few trainers actually and was told no to pets but not why. I didn't ask or push as I knew they had their reasons. I loved the dog love and learning dog of this book. Dog lovers will either love or really like this book. I was given this book by my step-mom and will give the audio to my adult son. I think he'll appreciate the life changes
Profile Image for Karen Wingate.
Author 9 books28 followers
June 17, 2018
Have Dog, Will Travel is the poignant memoir of a visually impaired man's path to freedom through the harness of a sighted guide dog. At times, literary bordering on on poetic, and at other times, packed with historical information. the author takes the reader through his early decision to get a guide dog, the training, and the aftermath of living with a guide dog and working through the reactions of an uninformed society. I appreciated the blending of feelings and facts; of education and emotion. This was a well written book. Those with disabilities will resonate with the author's adjustments. Those who have no disability or exposure to those who do will catch a glimpse of what it's like to have a disability (it's not bad - it's different). Finally, it's just good reading about a season of life and letting go of past perspectives to grasp a future of freedom. I highly recommend it!
Profile Image for Julie.
303 reviews2 followers
June 20, 2025
Of course this book made me cry. I knew without a doubt, anything written sentimentally about a dog, especially a Labrador, would get tears flowing. What I wasn't prepared for is how much I learned.

I'm a pretty abled body person, when migraines don't leave me confined to bed, but this really opened my eyes (sorry, no pun intended) at what life as a blind person, a person with a seeing eyedog and just a disabled person in general deal with. Having traveled with a mother who has needed a wheelchair and a son who is on the spectrum, makes me somewhat aware of these struggles, but no where to the extent of what this book taught me.

I would encourage anyone to read this. It is written beautifully, Kuusisto is of course a poet, but it really sparked more empathy in me as well.
Profile Image for Tinks.
6 reviews
January 18, 2022
Another story I couldn’t put down . If you love learning others experiences and if you love dogs this will leave you feeling like your heart will burst at the seams. I finished with a better understanding and education on the guide dog system and people who experience the world from a blind perspective . Highly recommend rubbing a furry friends belly while turning the pages .
340 reviews
December 15, 2024
A man grows up being told by his alcoholic mother that his near blindness was something to hide. He learned to do that. He memorized step counts, locations of landmarks, etc. He “passed” through these efforts and with his partial sight. Then, he lost his job and had to figure out to live. The book then moves on to his finding a wonderful guide dog organization, and finding a dog for himself. I learned a lot about guide dog training, and something I didn’t realize how much training the individual getting the dog needs. A very good read.
Profile Image for Kacey Lundgren.
239 reviews11 followers
May 16, 2022
I blasted through this book in a few hours and loved every page of it. Honest, witty, and filled with great poetry.
292 reviews7 followers
March 30, 2018
This book was deeply touching. I enjoyed reading about how Corky came into Stephen’s life and the way she changed it for the better. A good read for all dog lovers.
588 reviews11 followers
December 30, 2019
I found this book perusing the library shelves and what a treasure! I am a real cat person but this made me want to go out and adopt a dog! The author is a poet and his sensitivity made the story more poignant. I'm sorry to say his mother was embarrassed by her son's blindness (he could see a little) and constantly insisted that he pretend to see in order to hide his disability. This of course caused emotional problems throughout his life but he eventually rose above it and after classes and training was united with a guide dog . What transpired between them was brilliantly and tenderly told by the author in a way only a poet can. This is not only a loving story but also extremely educational concerning the world of the blind. It is not maudlin and often told with humor. I highly recommend it.
33 reviews
April 28, 2018
An informative and touching story, about service dogs, and how they help their owners gain independence.
208 reviews4 followers
March 12, 2018
What an incredible story. The author has gone through tremendously difficult circumstances and yet his outlook is so uplifting. I enjoyed this book as a memoir but also as a dog lover. The bond between Corky and Stephen Kuusisto is not only beautiful but beautifully told. Well-written. Recommended.

My thanks to NetGalley for providing me with an eARC in exchange for my honest opinion.
38 reviews
March 26, 2018

Interesting in that it tells the training one goes through to get a guide dog and later how people react to guide dogs and their handlers.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kelley.
970 reviews6 followers
April 20, 2021
It's hard to fathom that once a upon a time, a blind child's parents would deny their child was blind and to tell him to ignore the fact that he was blind. It's hard to imagine how much disabled American's fought just to be able exist and move about their day like an able-bodied person. It's not hard to imagine fake service dogs, as they became more accepted, people saw what service dogs "get to do" and started to take advantage. It also seems crazy that dogs were not bred for this, that they went to shelters hoping the dogs wouldn't bite them during training. Also hard to imagine the Lab was overlooked, as they are so good at this stuff. I love books about dogs, amazing dogs are just that much better.
92 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2024
A beautifully enlightening and thoroughly enjoyable memoir of unconditional love and trust as Corkie, a guide dog, enters into the life of her sight-impaired companion, the author Stephen Kuusisto. Kuusisto takes us into his world as a blind person and the disability, discrimination and despair he and others with special needs contend with. Although, to me, he is truly a remarkably independent person navigating his environment with confidence as his world opens up to him when, at the age of 38, Corkie comes into his life.
Profile Image for Tarn Wilson.
Author 4 books33 followers
September 15, 2018
Gorgeous book. A memoir about a blind man's first guide dog - and how that relationship opened his heart, helped heal his past, and opened a fuller future. Also includes an illuminating history of disability rights in our country. All written in beautiful language.
Profile Image for Amelie Koury.
4 reviews1 follower
March 7, 2020
I work with dogs, so I'll admit I was a little hesitant to read this. Working with animals is an unregulated industry. Anyone can be a dog trainer, no qualifications or education required. This applies to service dogs, working dogs, etc. You can do whatever you want to the dogs, train however you want. In Quebec, we have the MIRA foundation which trains service dogs. They use dated, abusive methods. There are people who choose to follow science and those who choose not to. There are no standards or rules to follow. Dog owners are at the mercy of those who claim to know what they're doing. This is why I was so worried about this book. Will I read about the use of dominance? Will I read about the use of pain to train dogs?
I was so pleasantly surprised to read about Guiding Eyes and how they use science based training. This not only makes it fun for the dog, but much more fun for the human too! (for example: is it fun to yell at your kids? to punish them? does that make for pleasant parenting or build trust?). I loved reading Stephen's experience with Corky, his interpretation of their bond, how he "sees" dogs, his relationship with his service dog and humans relationship with dogs. It was heart warming, inspiring, beautiful, reassuring, comforting.
I learned lot about "blindness" or being "visually impaired", things that simply never occurred to me and got me thinking and wondering about different things. We really all act the same around our insecurities. We think we're being judged on them by random people we pass on the street. We imagine the thoughts a stranger must have on us "he must be disgusted by how fat i am. he's judging what I'm eating", "she must think i'm so ugly, she must wonder why I don't do something about it" or "they must think i'm defective because i'm blind". It was eye opening because when he wrote about what he thought others thought of him, I told myself "that's ridiculous." only to then say to myself "Amelie, you do this exact same thing but about something else".

I thought I knew a lot about guide dogs, this book made me realize how little I actually knew. For example, the pacing never occurred to me! Matching a dog to the persons' walking pace (among other things). The travel, a dog who enjoys traveling for the person who travels vs a dog who isn't good with traveling for the person who can't or won't travel, who'll stay within a certain area. It seems so obvious now, but it's just not something I thought of! I found the work fascinating, it got me interested in that field.

It's not just the content of the book, it's how Stephen explains it all. It's clear and simple yet poetic, visual, and emotional. His words stimulate all your senses.

Definitely going to look for his other books!
Profile Image for Heather.
603 reviews11 followers
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August 15, 2018


The thing that I found absolutely amazing about this memoir is that the author was raised to not let anyone know that he was blind.  How do you even do that?  There is a very scary story about the time he rented a motor scooter and drove around the mountains in Santorini following the red blob that was his friend.  

His mother was adamant that being blind meant that he was defective.  He should never let anyone know.  That meant memorizing the small towns he lived in.  Reading by holding the paper up to his left eye.  Living a life made difficult by a disability but almost impossible by a lie.  Seriously, his mother needed a good whooping. 

At 38 he was forced to make a change.  He got his first guide dog.  He was now open about his blindness.  It changed his entire life.

This book is a tribute to the freedom found in living your true life and the way that is enhanced by his guide dog.  The author is a poet and that is obvious in his lyrical writing style.  He is a very philosophical person who deeply considers things that others may gloss over.

I appreciated the fact that he discussed the professionalism of real service dogs.  He worries about the damage being done by people registering out of control pets as emotional support dogs just so they can take them anywhere.  (One of my major pet peeves!)  He explains that there still is resistance to and ignorance of guide dogs for the blind now.  I wouldn't have thought it would be so common.  

I was a guide dog puppy raiser.  (My puppy passed his temperment and training tests but failed his physical.)  He talks a lot about the importance of puppy raisers and the trainers who work with the dogs.  You find out who the process works.  

For the dog lovers, this story starts in 1994.  That means that the dog does die before the book was written.  It is discussed but not dwelt on.  

This is a wonderful book for dog lovers everywhere.  All dogs can change your life but Corky the labrador revolutionized her person's. This review was originally posted on Based On A True Story
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