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The Badness of King George

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Judith Summers' life is about to change dramatically. Her five-year relationship with her on-off boyfriend has finally ended. Her son, Joshua, is off to university, and for the first time since her husband died she's living alone. Well, not entirely alone. She still has George, her King Charles Spaniel. Judith knows she needs a new challenge. But how free can she ever be with George in tow? He is, of course, immensely lovely. But he's also spoilt, lazy, and prone to flouncing around the house like a fluffed-up diva. But then, during a chance encounter , Judith finds out about Many Tears, a dog rescue centre. Before she knows it, she has joined a nationwide network of canine foster carers. Far from having Judith all to himself, George suddenly finds he has to share his owner with lots of other less fortunate dogs. And he's finding adjusting to this new way of life a bit of a challenge...

432 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 2010

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About the author

Judith Summers

29 books14 followers
Judith Summers was born and brought up in London, England.

A journalist, novelist and historian,she has published five novels and five non-fiction titles.

Her memoir, My Life with George, and its sequel, The Badness of King George, both became international bestsellers, and her definitive history of Soho won the London Tourist Board Book of the Year award in 1990.


Judith has recently re-published her early novels - Dear Sister, Crime and Ravishment, and Frogs and Lovers - as ebooks.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Severine Vaerendonck.
2 reviews
January 6, 2023
Enjoyed this book as a sequel on My life with George.
Can also be read as stand alone.
I appreciate Judiths attempts on fostering shelter dogs, but she is totally incapable of training them, which creates hilarious situations. A must-read for dog lovers.
Profile Image for Leah.
1,650 reviews338 followers
September 30, 2010
After Judith Summers’ latest relationship breaks up, in part due to her pet Cavalier George, and her son Joshua heads off for University, Judith’s life is looking a bit empty and she’s suffering from ‘empty nest’ syndrome. A chance encounter on Hampstead Heath with a fellow dog-owner who adopted a dog from Many Tears Animal Rescue. After her step-daughter then adopts a dog from the same centre, Judith browses the website and decides to head down to Wales to visit the centre in person. Once there, Judith learns that not only can you adopt dogs from the centre, but you can also foster dogs whilst the centre looks for new homes for the dogs. Judith thinks it sounds like a fantastic idea and decides to go for it, hoping it’ll cure the empty feeling she currently has. George, though, isn’t too keen on the idea and when Judith gets her first foster dog, there’s no telling what George will do to keep Judith to himself…

Since reading Marley and Me last year, and acquiring two dogs of my own two years ago, I’ve become a real fan of stories that include animals, be it fiction or non-fiction despite not really being a huge non-fiction fan. Before coming across The Badness of King George I had heard of Judith Summers as she has written a fiction book called Who Gets Fluffy? which I have on my shelf to read at some point. However I hadn’t picked up anything else of hers, although I did like the sound of her first book about her Cavalier King Charles Spaniel George, My Life with George, but I hadn’t managed to find it anywhere. I received a copy of her new non-fiction book The Badness of King George and because I was at a loose end, I decided to give it a read.

As with my other non-fiction reviews, this isn’t going to be a particularly long one as there’s only so much you can say about a non-fiction book, isn’t there? I don’t think it’s necessary to read Judith’s first book about George, My Life With George, before reading The Badness of King George as Judith fills us in on how she acquired George, how her husband Udi died of cancer, and while I will seek out the first book, I don’t think it matters when it comes to enjoying this new tale. I would also mention that if you’re not a pet fan or a dog owner then this book probably isn’t for you, and it’s well worth you avoiding it because you won’t get the pleasure from it that a dog owner will when it comes to all things dogs.

It does take a while before Judith actually begins adopting dogs, around 100 pages, and before that happens we learn about George, about how Judith becomes a dog fosterer but the book really takes off once Judith does actually foster a dog. I don’t have first hand knowledge of dog fostering, or house training a dog (ours were already house-trained) so I found Judith’s experiences both eye-opening and fairly amusing. From what we learn of George, Judith is a really bad person to ask to house-train dogs yet one of the things she has to do whilst fostering dogs is to help house-train them and, more often than not, it ends in disaster. Judith is incredibly honest and admits she is useless at being the dominant one with her own dog George and the dogs she fosters.

As well as the dog fostering aspect to the book, there’s also a bit of a burgeoning romance going on with Matthew, whom Judith meets at a single night one night. It was a sweet aspect to the book and it was a good thing to include after all Judith has been through the past few years. It’s definitely an uplifting book and it highlights beautifully what Many Tears, the Animal Rescue centre Judith fosters from, do to help dogs. Judith includes many stats throughout the book, about puppy farms (who could be so cruel?) to how many abandoned dogs their are each and every year. The numbers aren’t great, but as long as rescue centers are around, there’ll always be hope. It broke my heart a little to hear the stories of some of the dogs Many Tears look after because I truly can’t comprehend how people can be so cruel to such a trusting and loving animal.

Don’t get me wrong, the book isn’t one long rant on the people in this world who do terrible things, it’s a story of how one woman deciding to change her life by fostering dogs and how her very own dog George took it. At times it’s amusing, it’s heartbreaking and it made me nod in recognition, and I really enjoyed reading it. It might well be backwards but I’m definitely going to buy myself My Life With George and see how it all began!
56 reviews
November 19, 2010
A very enjoyable Saturday read, and a good gift for anybody having trouble training a difficult pet (you are not alone!) or animal lovers in general. It's a lot of fun, but doesn't have much depth to it, and it boils down to a 'this happened, and then this happened' kind of book. Not a lot of sophistication, just the book version of having coffee with your funniest friend.
Profile Image for Sharon Reeves.
108 reviews4 followers
August 27, 2013
I borrowed this from a friend, who had fostered dogs in the past. I found it a lovely truthful account of fostering dogs, when you don't really know what you are doing, and your own dog does not listen to you. Some of the true stories that she descibes from rescues in the UK, are heartbreaking. If you love dogs, you will like this book.
Profile Image for Karen.
72 reviews
October 29, 2012
This is a story of how one woman decided to change her life and resolve her empty-nest syndrome by fostering rescue dogs.
Profile Image for Lucy.
65 reviews
October 3, 2014
Despite the childish cover that put me off at first the dog lover in me loved hearing all the stories of each foster dog
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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