|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
THE UNDERDOGS tells the story of Karen Shirk: felled at age 24 by a
neuromuscular disease and facing life as an immobile, deeply
isolated and depressed, ventilator-dependent patient, she was
rejected by every service dog agency in the country as "too
disabled." Her nurse encouraged her to raise her own service dog,
and Ben, a German shepherd, dragged her back into life. "How many
people are stranded like I was," she wondered, "who could lead
productive lives with a service dog?" A thousand dogs later, Karen
Shirk's service dog academy, 4 Paws for Ability, is restoring
broken children and their families to life. Melissa Fay Greene
tells the stories of isolated children, struggling parents, and the
marvelous dogs who gallop into their lives. Into these modern
wonder tales, she weaves the latest scientific discoveries about
the inner lives of dogs. It turns out that dogs really are doing
the astounding things they appear to do, and they're doing them for
people they love. The frontiers of the human/dog bond are explored
here with insight, compassion, humor, and joy. A cast of remarkable
characters-scientists and felons, dog trainers and parents,
children with disabilities and the great dogs themselves-together
address questions about our attachment to dogs, what constitutes a
productive life, and what can be accomplished with unconditional
love.
When the two-time National Book Award finalist Melissa Fay Greene
confided to friends that she and her husband planned to adopt a
four-year-old boy from Bulgaria to add to their four children at
home, the news threatened to place her, she writes, "among the
greats: the Kennedys, the McCaughey septuplets, the von Trapp
family singers, and perhaps even Mrs. Feodor Vassilyev, who,
according to the "Guinness Book of World Records," gave birth to
sixty-nine children in eighteenth-century Russia."
Greene is best known for her books on the civil rights movement and
the African HIV/AIDS pandemic. But she and her husband have also
pursued a more private vocation: parenthood. "We so loved raising
our four children by birth, we didn't want to stop. When the clock
started to run down on the home team, we brought in ringers."
A celebration of parenthood; an ingathering of children, through
birth and out of loss and bereavement; a relishing of moments
hilarious and enlightening--"No Biking in the House Without a
Helmet" is a loving portrait of a unique twenty-first-century
family as it wobbles between disaster and joy.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|