In honor of "National Dog Day(s of Summer)," I picked up Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson's book, THE DOG WHO COULDN'T STOP LOVING, because quite frankly I can't stop loving *my* dog, a sweet highly lovable geriatric basset hound. Call it selfish, or call it neotenic or symbionic as Masson does, but the canine love is alive and well.
If you are looking for a book like MARLEY & ME or THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN, this isn't the one for you. This book is a little more scholastic--lots of studies are cited, along with other books and experts on similar subjects. Masson does an excellent job of paring it down for us folks who are more ennamored with our dogs than we are the science behind it. But if you have an affinity for social science, animal behavior, and well--love--then this book will also speak to you (perhaps in the form of a bark). Ironcially, I learned the bark is a man-made attribute of the dog; they don't do it in the wild (as dogs are derived from wolves). Sure, wolves howl and whine, but they don't bark. The bark is a characteristic developed by man for dogs.
You'll learn this and so much more from THE DOG WHO COULDN'T STOP LOVING, like prisoners who are given a puppy to care for (the dog loves his inmate, no strings attached), guide/service dogs, and why we sleep with four-legged buds. No other species chooses another species to sleep with, so says Masson, with perhaps the exception of a cat.
THE DOG WHO COULDN'T STOP LOVING will warm your heart and give you a greater appreciation for Fido.