Frankly, until now I usually dreaded reading dog nutrition books but as a veterinarian I dutifully kept reading them hoping that someday I might just find one that I could recommend and that could help my clients make good decisions about their pet's nutrition. I think I've finally found that book.
Without giving a specific recommendation Ms. Case does an excellent job of walking readers through the common pitfalls and psychological tricks used by nutrition companies to mislead pet owners and how you can acknowledge how much we love our pet and then think critically about nutrition to pick the best food possible for them.
As promised the book is a compelling read and brings in a lot of the popular science and psychology concepts you'd see from the bestseller's lists.
My major qualm is with a flow chart that discusses how to find reliable recipes for homemade pet food diets that does not make specific reference to diets specifically formulated by veterinary nutritionists given studies suggesting that several recipes that may appear reputable from books and online sources may in fact not be complete and balanced. Additionally, as a veterinarian who has seen pet owners with individuals on chemotherapy feed their pets raw food diets and then have those pets lick the faces of those cancer patients, I generally feel most books should issue stronger warnings about the potential risks of raw diets to people, but this book still does a good job and a better job than most.
Still, the best dog nutrition book I have had a chance to read so far.