While this story does have dogs, three, included in the story, it isn’t really about the dogs. It’s more about the people who they share their life with.
George’s wife has just died, and George’s response is repeated bursts of inappropriate anger, most of which are directed at either the dachshund puppy, Poppy, that his wife brought home without even asking his opinion on the matter. To add insult to injury, his neighbor, Betty, seems intent on stopping by to make sure he isn’t just sitting around in the same underpants he’s been wearing, not showering or taking care of or feeding Poppy - which is exactly how he’s been spending his days. He doesn’t know that his wife had set these visits in motion to keep him from wallowing and wasting away alone in the house. George is not really a “people person,” he has no manners, he seems chronically cranky, which can’t completely be explained away because his wife has just died, he’s just a crotchety old man. He wasn’t exactly prince charming to his wife, either, expecting her to wait on his every need, but underneath it all, apparently, there was love.
Then there is Dan, a mental health counselor who has OCD, himself. He is also struggling with accepting his feelings about his sexuality. His dog is a labrador named Fitz, who seems to be his substitute best friend, and one of his excuses, for not having a partner, or a life, really. He’s a bit awkward with people, and struggles even more once a patient appears at his door early on, and finds himself attracted to this patient who seems to be subtly flirting with him, that is if he’s not just imagining it.
Lizzie is a former teacher, a woman who has escaped her husband, with her son, and they live in a women’s shelter. She doesn’t talk much about it, trying to protect her young son Lenny, and her, from the past, but her emotional and physical scars tell part of her story. It’s her secret, to share or not, but Maude, the resident dog at the shelter, a terrier, seems to be aware of her overly protective nature, her wanting to hide from someone or something.
This is Waller’s debut novel, and in some ways it feels like an attempt at a small dose of A Man Called Ove along with a dash of The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper adding an assortment of dogs to appeal to dog lovers. The first half of this I was pretty sure I was not going to finish it, but it did pick up a bit in the second half.
Trigger Warnings - Self-Injury Disorder, suicide
Published: 11 May 2021
Many thanks for the ARC provided by St. Martin’s Press / St. Martin’s Griffin