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Small Dogs Can Save Your Life

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A story of survival, transformation and love.

In a beautiful and powerful memoir which mixes honest, personal revelation with literature, history, and inspirational self-help, Bel Mooney tells the story of her rescue dog, Bonnie, who in turn rescued Bel when her world fell apart with the all-too public break-up of her 35-year marriage. SMALL DOGS CAN SAVE YOUR LIFE really is a story of survival, and also one of love.

This is an account of six years in Bel's life, from when she first acquired Bonnie from a rescue home, through Bel’s years of personal heartbreak and disappointment, and on to the happiness which she has now found in a new marriage and a new life, with the Maltese at her side all the way. This is a book about transformation and change, about picking yourself up and attacking life in the way that a small dog will go for the postman's trousers - and about celebrating life, much as your canine companion will always celebrate your return, even from the shortest trip.

Beautifully engaging, entertaining, full of personal anecdotes and deeply moving, SMALL DOGS CAN SAVE YOUR LIFE will take the reader on an inspirational walk with one very small but very remarkable dog - a dog who became a symbol
for all that is best about dogs, and about we humans too.

Bel Mooney is a journalist with almost forty years' experience. Well-loved by millions for her advice columns, first for the Times and now in the Daily Mail, as well as countless programmes for radio and television, Bel takes the reader on a journey of discovery, in which she finds herself transformed into a dog-lover by one small and lively bundle of white fur, as well as telling her own gripping story. ~ Amazon product description

320 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2010

7 people are currently reading
47 people want to read

About the author

Bel Mooney

97 books20 followers
(From official website)

As someone who has worked right across the media, I ‘meet’ the widest range of people through my books for adults and children, journalism and broadcasting. And I love it – especially my latest metamorphosis into an advice columnist, first for The Times and now for the Daily Mail on Saturdays. Believe me, there’s no complacency when I say I am blessed with a terrific life. It hasn’t all been easy. But I guess nobody’s life is…and why should it be?

I was born in Liverpool in 1946, where home was a flat in a low-rise estate called The Green, on Queen’s Drive, near Broadgreen Hospital, where I was born. I went to Northway Primary School and then passed the 11+ to go to Aigburth Vale Girls’ High School. This was old-fashioned state education and it served me very well indeed.
Then when I was 14 my world was turned upside down by a move to the South-West of England, to Trowbridge in Wiltshire. That’s when my beloved, hardworking parents obtained their first mortgage, on a three bed-roomed semi. It was such a step up in the world! I went to the local girls’ grammar school and tried to learn a new accent, in order to fit in. It wasn’t easy. But maybe writers should never really fit in…

When I left school I went to University College London, and in 1969 gained a first class honours degree in English Language and Literature. In 1968 I married my first husband, the broadcaster and writer Jonathan Dimbleby. We met in our second year (he was a philosophy student) and married in a whirlwind after knowing each other just four months. Our marriage was a real meeting of minds and was to last for 35 years, until 2003. Jonathan is one of the best, most wonderful people I have ever met. Still.

When I graduated I expected to go back to Uni and do a PhD as invited by my department, but I was seduced down the primrose path of journalism, and have never regretted not writing that thesis on Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf. Anyway, I am now a Fellow of UCL and hold honorary degrees from Bath University and Liverpool John Moores – so, if I wanted, could dip my toe into university life once more.

My first job was on the now-legendary magazine NOVA, which was very exciting, as it used some of the best writers, photographers and designers around. I was Assistant to the Editor, then a feature writer, then contributing editor. After that I had a contract with the Telegraph Magazine, contributed to the Sunday Times, Guardian etc, and was a regular with the New Statesman, under the inspiring editorship of Anthony Howard. Later still I wrote columns variously in the Sunday Times, Cosmopolitan, the Listener and the Daily Mirror.

In 1974 Jonathan and I had Daniel, then in 1975 our second son Tom was stillborn, and in 1980 we had Kitty. At that time we moved to Bath and I began another career as a broadcaster, making programmes for radio and television. I also began to write fiction, starting with ‘The Windsurf Boy’ (1983) and then the first ‘Kitty’ book, ‘I Don’t Want To’ (1985). In 2005 I began a new strand of my career, writing a weekly advice column for The Times, and in 2007 I took that column to The Daily Mail.

In September 2007 I married the photographer Robin Allison-Smith. We live in Bath with our small white dog, a Maltese called Bonnie (of course!) We like doing travel pieces together and riding around on Robin’s Harley-Davidson ‘Fat Boy’ and dancing to the 1972 Wurlitzer and eating and drinking and going to the theatre and hanging out with friends and with Dan and Kitty. Robin and I have set up a company ‘Moon Media’ which offers photography and words, sometimes together. Contact www.robinallisonsmith.co.uk to discuss possibilities. We are also co-owners of a boutique ski chalet in the French Alps, so if you are interested in a wonderful holiday (beautiful in summer too) www.broski.co.uk.

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5 stars
18 (26%)
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11 (16%)
3 stars
24 (35%)
2 stars
8 (11%)
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Mandy.
500 reviews6 followers
July 26, 2017
Recommended by a fellow book lover. Not mu cup of tea. I felt there was a lot of bragging about who she knows or knew and although a lover of dogs found it all too sickly. On a positive her love for her first husband was immense and I believe never stopped.

Pop sugar challenge : about an interesting woman
Profile Image for Katie Heron.
18 reviews
September 28, 2013
Having read Jonathan Dimbleby's painfully self obsessed "Russia", I was always going to love this. Charming, honest and full of small dogs. What's not to like?
Profile Image for Adelyne.
1,393 reviews37 followers
December 28, 2017
(+) Very candid, the author's feelings show through in the writing
(-) I loved the parts where she was talking about her pets, especially Bonnie the small dog, but there were too few of these

Overall: I dropped this book about halfway through, despite Mooney making a lot of effort in the introduction to qualify her feelings towards her ex-husband, I still felt that there were conflicted emotions throughout the book. Not enough emphasis was given to the dog (though maybe this happens later in the book), but I feel that the 150 pages or so that I gave it should have been enough to get onto the topic.
228 reviews4 followers
December 1, 2022
This is a story of a British family that lives on a farm near Bath, U.K. They have a lot of dogs. One of them a small, white dog becomes very special to the writer when her husband leaves her for an opera singer. Moody writes well. She is somewhat of a media celebrity in the U.K.
Profile Image for Shirley Wells.
Author 29 books80 followers
June 10, 2011
This was a good read with interesting notes about dogs in history, art, etc. It was also a frank account of the author's marriage breakup. I felt I was reading a private love letter to her ex-husband rather than a story of how a small dog saved someone's life.
1,019 reviews14 followers
January 4, 2014
I usually finish any book I start, but after fifty pages, I'm done with this. Thought it would be better if I got into the story but it didn't happen for me. Guess it just isn't my type of book.
Profile Image for Ronnie.
107 reviews2 followers
November 20, 2014
A book I would never had read had it not been a book club choice. Was aware of Bel Mooney but not of the detail of her private life. A little over sentimental on the dog front and not one sentence about poop scooping!
3 reviews
July 2, 2012
Loving it, reading with my own small dogs beside me!
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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