If you’re looking for an informative, dense, and scientific read to help you better understand your dog, I would recommend this book to you. It’s all of the above, and all of the points the author makes are backed up with scientific evidence. Author Stanley Coren is recognized as an expert in human-canine interaction, so he’s quite educated in subjects like this one.
If you want to know what the world looks, sounds, smells, tastes, and feels like to a dog, this book tells you about how dogs perceive the world through all five senses. If you’re wondering what happens as a dog ages from a puppy to an adult, or an adult to a senior, How Dogs Think has two enlightening chapters on that. There are also multiple chapters on how dogs learn, a chapter that explains how some of your canine companion’s actions are preprogrammed and some are taught, a chapter that answers the question of consciousness in dogs, and more. Each chapter is divided into multiple sections, and there are a few data collections thrown in, as well as many real-life examples of what Coren is writing about in that moment. Coren will even occasionally drop some humor into the text, a rarity in non-fiction. He is also clearly passionate about his subject, which I found made the book more enjoyable.
I thought How Dogs Think was a very informational and interesting read, but it is also packed with scientific terms and it is not an easy read. I would say that this would be most interesting to dog owners, dog lovers, animal lovers, or people who are curious about an animal’s mind. If you are hoping for answers about a dog’s perspective, but don’t want to lay awake at night pondering psychological questions, (kidding, kind of) this is unfortunately not for you. However, if you want an incredibly useful, clear, intelligent, and scientific guide, no matter the density or depth, then I would say go get this book.