Home » Non-shaggy dog stories of the heartwarming variety

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Non-shaggy dog stories of the heartwarming variety — 11 Comments

  1. I hadn’t heard Buford’s great story, so here’s thirty cheers for Buford, atsa good boy hero-dog.

  2. I have a Great Pyrenees, named Lilyana, just like Buford. Tonight, she shall have a grilled cheese sandwich, to honor her Great Pyreneeshood. She would most assuredly do the same for a lost child.

  3. Great dog story. Lots of ways it could have been tragic, ~ 100.

    Kingman, Az, on Route 66, just before Barstow in the Mohave desert, as well as the song. In the Chuck Berry version, he wrongly says Barstow like wow, rather than toe. I was 4, and flew with sister & Granny, while Dad & JoMa drove from Chicago to LA. More than two thousand miles all the way. They got divorced in 61-62.

    Kingman has lots more vegetation, but is still really dry. 2 yr old toddler easily could have died.

    It’s good to be empathic with those suffering some tragedy, or near miss, like this.

  4. @ physicsguy > “dogs are angels among us, and we do not deserve them.”

    Perhaps we should add to Neo’s list of dubious heroes of the Left the group that wants us to eliminate dogs to save the planet from climate change.
    Maybe that will open eyes among their supporters, in ways that killing people doesn’t seem to have done.

  5. The most chilling and sad short story I’ve ever read was “The Last of the Winnebagos” a world where a mutated parvo virus killed all the dogs. Connie Willis is a very gifted writer.
    I believe that dogs can make us better people. I’ve seen it happen.

  6. A JFM > “Connie Willis is a very gifted writer.”

    She is indeed, and I have read and loved everything she wrote.
    BUT she is also among the clueless Democrats who believe everyone who reads their books shares their political principles.

    I was at a book-signing reception for her in our Denver suburb library around 2009 (ages ago now!) and she made a derogatory comment or two about President Bush*, obviously expecting confirmation from the audience, which she got, except for my family, which sat in jaw-dropping stupor at the arrogant effrontery of her assumption.

    I suppose that no ever had ever objected to such partisan remarks (it was Denver-adjacent, and she has lived in Colorado most of her adult life), but that had never happened to me before.
    And we conservatives are far too polite to make a ruckus about being disrespected and having our feelings hurt.

    I still read her books, but I don’t buy them anymore.

    *In re Dubya, at the time I supported him and disagreed with her opinions; after the Bush family decided they preferred Biden and the Democrats to Trump and the MAGA movement, I withdrew my allegiance.

  7. Re: Connie Willis

    AesopFan:

    How sad. I liked her too. In particular “To Say Nothing of the Dog,” which won the 1999 Hugo Award and fits with the current topic.

    The title is a call-out to the well-known Jerome K. Jerome book, “Three Men in a Boat” (1889).

  8. physicsguy

    As AmyJo, of Chicks on the Right, often says, “dogs are angels among us, and we do not deserve them.”

    I doubt that AmyJo had ever met a French Bulldog. My experience–very combative towards other dogs.

  9. @ huxley > I have also read the Jerome book, “Three Men in a Boat” and it is as funny as the Willis book.
    She writes a lot of both subtle and nearly-slapstick humor, which is what got my attention before I started reading her more serious tomes.

    This is one of my favorites, a clear-headed view of social censorship.
    I haven’t kept up with her political views, but I wonder if she endorses the “anything is fair in Getting Hitler-Trump” or if she has had second thoughts about the Democrats going so far left since 1988, like a number of other erstwhile liberals.
    The short story itself is better than the review, of course.
    http://www.troynovant.com/Atalanta/Bookcase-S/Willis-Connie/Ado.html

  10. You figure domesticating dogs from wolves in, maybe, ten thousand generations. It would be a pretty harsh culling. Except for those which didn’t buy the program and ran off.
    You can tell from how the puppy plays with the two-year old whether it’s a keeper.

    Saw one documentary which presumes dogs have a need, maybe a dopamine hit, to be around humans.

    So, except for the war dogs, we have bred “angels”.

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