Now in paperback, an irresistible gift for dog poems from the dogs' point of view, written by the well known writers and poets who love them.List of Albee, Jennifer Allen, Danny Anderson, Lynda Barry, Rick Bass, Charles Baxter, Robert Benson, Roy Blount, Jr., Ron Carlson, Jill Ciment, Bernard Cooper, Stephen Dobyns, Mark Doty, Stephen Dunn, Anderson Ferrell, Amy Gerstler, Matthew Graham, Ron Hansen, Brooks Haxton, Cynthia Heimel, Amy Hempel, Noy Hollan, Andrew Hudgins, John Irving, Denis Johnson, R.S. Jones, Walter Kirn, Sheila Kohler, Maxine Kumin, Natalie Kusz, Anne Lamott, Gordon Lish, Ralph Lombreglia, Merrill Markoe, Pearson Marx, Erin McGraw, Heather McHugh, Arthur Miller, George Minot, Susan Minot, Honor Moore, Mary Morris, Alicia Muñoz, Elise Paschen, Padgett Powell, Wyatt Prunty, Lawrence Raab, Mark Richard, John Rybicki, Jeanne Schinto, Bob Shacochis, Jim Shepard, Karen Shepard, Lee Smith, Ben Sonnenberg, Kate Clark Spencer, Gerald Stern,Terese Svoboda, William Tester, Abigail Thomas, Lily Tuck, Sidney Wade, Kathryn Walker, William WegmanFrom the Trade Paperback edition.
Jim Shepard is the author of seven novels, including most recently The Book of Aron, which won the Sophie Brody Medal for Achievement in Jewish Literature from the American Library Association and the PEN/New England Award for fiction, and five story collections, including his new collection, The World To Come. Five of his short stories have been chosen for the Best American Short Stories, two for the PEN/O. Henry Prize Stories, and one for a Pushcart Prize. He teaches at Williams College.
Sorry, I found the poems boring or just not good. I will include two poems in my review. One that had similar elements of Rudyard Kipling's 'If' that has each stanza start strong but limp out and another that was powerfully poignant but so sad in it's message that I can't say I 'enjoyed it.
Lily Luck Sniff I If you can sniff out danger and keep barking When those around you seem to doubt the cause And all they find to do is keep remarking Don’t track up the carpet with your paws! If you can lick the hand of Him who needs you and realize it’s really no mistake when that hand that somehow failed to feed you Feeds itself the whole dam sirloin steak
II If you can hold your water when about you Dogs are losing theirs and He is blaming it on you If you can coolly live with “sit” as well as “git” And rush to entertain Him when He dons his mitt If you can wait and not be tired by waiting while He pursues a poker hand or other Dada Like watching TV football or pretending to be mating Testing to the limit our fortune and blada
lll If you keep from whining when Master lets it slip You're not to be included on the hunting trip or when Their own behavior civility ignores And uncomprehendingly They prefer their company to yours If you can keep your calm, not lose your noodle At passing Pekes or mincing sweatered Poodles If stoically you do not show you’re stricken When once again They eye an orphan kitten
IV ff you can uncomplaining spend the day In solitude and when it ends Greet those who finally return to play As long lost friends And if in digging, without damage to a single rose You find your long lost bone on which to sup You’ll have acquired a hound’s discerning nose And—what is more—you'll be a dog, my pup! —Duncan Tuck
Ben Sonnenberg Harry 1981-1992 d. March 13 Stay
I was a bad dog and didn’t obey Any command, until today. —Harry
There was also another poem I liked a line or two out of. This was the line:
Life isn’t meaningless because there’s food. Consider kibble: its smell, its taste, its mood.
Does for poetry what "Marley and Me" did for memoir. Endearing, heart warming and poignant, I laughed until I cried and cried until I cried some more. I'd recommend it to any dog lover. Have a tissue box handy for the last section!
Some of these made me emotional, and I loved the twist on the classics like If by Rudyard Kipling and the Odyssey. It's definitely a must-read for any dog parent or lover.
I was really looking forward to reading this book, but it really fell flat for me in the expressiveness and emotional impact department. For someone who loves dogs as much as I do, that shows you how flat this book is, if I couldn't personally be moved by the poems. There were only three poems in the whole collection that made me smile or sigh with contentment just a little bit.
The idea behind this book was brilliant, but the execution of it, not so brilliant.
Apparently, many writers' dogs like to write in patterns, particularly with rhyme and in villanelle form. There were more opportunities, I believe, that weren't quite taken--the funny was not strong (funny is hard), a little too unspecific but still familiar. Perhaps this book was more charming in concept, in the introduction, than in actuality.
Favorites were the poems by Alicia Munoz and (of course) Maxine Kumin.
…the way everything, each day, adds up to change your life, to steer it, turn it. Dogs know this. The best thing you can do about this is to take long naps and let it, the decay of life, go on past you, as if uninterested in you— though it is always interested. I can tell by the way he looks at us sometimes That he wants us to be young again; That he wants to believe it is all in our minds, that we have gotten lazy: that we have not paid close enough attention; that we have wasted time on too many naps and that it is all going by so fast, now, but the truth is we're just getting old. And tired. Our coats aren't as glossy as they were. We're lumpier with gristle, now, not muscle. We snore. - Jasper (Stephen Dobyns)
——
He is six foot one. I am one foot high. Don't ever let him tread on me. Though small, I claim my space and like you snug. (It's tough sharing a bed with me.) My name is Samson. Yours is Paschen. So keep your name and stay unwed with me. - Sam (Elise Paschen)
——
I fear there's something missing. I used to be complete. Now I find I am indifferent When a bitch walks by in heat.
Perhaps they've made me human. It's how humans seem to me. Seeking, looking, searching For what can never be. - Snowball (Mary Morris)
——
She loves me best in all the whole world. Better than big black Doc, he protects us, thinks he's big, hah Better than sofa-boy Homer with his Harrod's snooty collar, oh please spare me. Better than Mike and Digby the kissy thugs who scrabble at her face, so unseemly, so lacking in my perfect regal dignity (Okay so I eat eat poop sometimes, but delicately with panache), Better than that pretender, that backyard bred Josie With her submissive wiggle who's she kidding Josie pushes me off my pillow at night Josie must die, My human is mine, for I am descended from Marie Antoinettes Mimi. - Sally (Cynthia Heimel)
I loved this collection! I added it to my personal library back in high school and found the idea so enticing but I finally committed to sitting down with it and I felt I got so much out of the range of poetry forms and voices that I feel committed to, not only having a go at my own villanelle (perhaps in Buddy's voice if I can call upon his creative conscious with so many miles between us), but also reading as many poetry collections as I can next year to keep this explorative spirit alive in my own poetry!
Hard to rate a book of poetry, since I don’t read it often, but this little volume contained some touching, funny, and philosophical entries “written by” all sorts of dogs—some of which sounded suspiciously like my own. Writers both famous and unknown (to me, at least) shared poems starring their dogs, and this was a very enjoyable read.
This is so clever and sweet. Several of the poets were my professors in college, and several others were playwrights and authors I studied. There’s something for every dog lover in this anthology, no matter if you are suffering through a new puppy or are mourning your best friend.
Even someone like me, who has never owned a dog, will find humor and truth in this collection of poems obviously lovingly penned in their dogs' own voice by their writer owners.
Some of the poems were heartwarming. Some were sad. Some made me laugh out loud. 5 stars for making me feel all of that in a very short time. (disclaimer: I am a dog person)
Amazing concept! The photos are a real bonus. As is true in all collections, some poems were better than others. Ending with death poems, though, was hard.
I am not one to gravitate toward reading a lot of poetry, but I love dogs and was intrigued by what might be on their minds. Unleashed: Poems by Writers Dogs quickly became my favorite book of poetry for over two decades. I highly recommend this humorous and heartwarming poetry collection dedicated to our best friend, the dog.
I mainly wanted to read this for Amy Hempel's poem (also Denis Johnson), and even though hers was the shortest poem in the entire collection the picture of her sharing an ice cream cone with her dog was worth it alone. My 3 standouts were Drunk Dog by Erin McGraw, A War Poem by Jennifer Allen, and my personal favorite The Odyssey by Rick Bass. I can honestly say this is the best collection of dog poetry I've ever read.
a wonderful collection of poems/stories written by dogs (dog owners). my favorite is about a large poodle named bob barker who ate a brownie of his owners. woops, brownie was made with lsd and his story will have you laughing as he trips blissed out talking about food food food and how much he loves his master.
Wuff! I really wanted to love this book. I did smile a few times, but didn't find the stand out poems I expected and many of the poems just fell flat. Worse still, the Dunn poem that I pinned my hopes on was down right depressing. Not bad -- I don't think he could write a bad poem -- but bleak. Oh well...
An interesting book of poetry, "written" by the writer's dogs. I liked a few, disliked quite a few, skipped one, and the rest just weren't that memorable.
My favorites were Homer's Odyssey and this one by Karen Shepard, because my dog could have written it!
You gonna eat that? You gonna eat that? You gonna eat that?
I love this book. If you want unabashed sentimentality, you probably won't like it. But if you like poetry, and you want to read what writers trying to imagine dearly loved dogs writing poetry, you will like this. The poems are (almost all ) from the dog's point of view.