Skip to main content

Editorial Content for Dog Person

Book

Contributors

Reviewer (text)

Pamela Kramer

DOG PERSON is Camille Pagán's ultimate love story. It's a story about all kinds of love. Maybe, most of all, it's a love story about the love we feel for our dogs and what they bring to our lives. But it's not "just" a dog story (funny thing, when I was typing this review, without thinking, I wrote "Dog Story" as the title).

This lovely, heartwarming, heartbreaking and beautifully conceived novel is about love in all its permutations: a mother's love, our love for our animal companions, our love for our partner, our love for our parents (or not), our love for our friends and family, and our love of reading and finding safe spaces in which to read.

Harold, the first-person narrator, is a dog who has lived a long, full life. It's through his tired, rheumy eyes that we see Miguel, co-owner of Lakeside Books, with his partner, the love of his life, who recently died. Miguel isn't doing well. Both he and Harold are bereft after losing their Amelia May, a prolific writer of romance novels and an incredibly wonderful human being. She rescued Harold from a shelter after he spent his first year of life in a crate in a basement. Needless to say, Harold's life with Amelia and Miguel was nothing short of magnificent. He was much loved by Amelia and lay by her side as she wrote and spent time in the bookstore with her and Miguel when they worked there.

"[A]s beautiful as this story is, and it is one that I will be reading over and over again, be prepared to cry... I can't imagine that other readers won't love DOG PERSON as much as I do. It's beautiful, unique and unforgettable."

Pagán also creates a community within Lakeside Books that Miguel and Amelia cherished. Those who work there are passionate about books and the bookstore. So when Miguel isolates himself after Amelia's death, they do their best to keep the store afloat. While the booksellers have great ideas about how to expand the business, including selling e-books, Miguel is resistant to change. What just might help the struggling establishment is when Miguel's favorite author, Jonathan Middleton-Biggs, offers to make an appearance there. After years of Miguel trying to get JMB to come to the store, his assistant finally reaches out with the offer. This could draw in people from across the area, with special VIP tickets for those who want to talk to the author in a small group after the main event.

So when JMB doesn't show, the patrons are angry, and the bookstore is out the money for the catered event. Miguel is shocked and furious. If they have to repay the ticket holders, their demise will be hastened. JMB's assistant (and sister), Fiona, simply says that he has disappeared and she doesn't know where he is. Miguel is determined to track him down, demand that he honor his commitment, and pick another date to appear at the bookstore.

With the help of one of the booksellers, Dane, they find an address in Chicago and drive there with Harold to confront JMB. There they find Fiona and her daughter, who, to the consternation of Miguel and Harold, is named Amelia Mae. Hearing her name brings back the horrible sadness of their loss. But like their Amelia May, the young Amelia Mae loves dogs, and she falls completely in love with Harold. How can Harold, who has been so lonely for someone to adore him, resist?

Our journey alongside Harold is one that has us (at different points) smiling, crying and hopeful. His narration is unique as Pagán doesn't try to write as we might imagine a dog would think. Harold is perfectly literate, although he admits to his chagrin that he can't read. His outlook on life and his wisdom are almost completely due to Amelia's love and her ability to talk to him about everything.

And while Miguel has been expert at keeping people at arm's length for the past year, with Fiona he begins to open up. Harold comments, "Good questions are how you make friends; good listening is how you keep them." That's what Amelia May had told him, and it's a truism that's worth thinking about.

There's a lot of wisdom in this touching novel. One of my favorite literary characters, Louise Penny's Inspector Gamache, has four rules that are very wise. Amelia May channels the inspector when she informs Miguel that "the four most endearing words in the English language are 'I need your help.'" She says that people need to feel useful and valued, and by asking for help, we fulfill that desire.

But as beautiful as this story is, and it is one that I will be reading over and over again, be prepared to cry --- just as Harold cries over his beautiful Amelia May. The exquisitely emotional writing will deeply affect those who love and have lost people and animals. So much of Harold's wisdom is like a window into our souls. He tells us at one point, when he's crying tears, that "it feels like happiness and sadness and remembering, all mixed together...it's the kind of feeling you can have only after you've loved so much that you know in your bones that moving on will never, ever be the same thing as letting go."

The ending, of course, is a minimum three-tissue read. Harold is an old, sick dog. We know how it's going to end, but that doesn't mean that such foreknowledge makes the (fictional) reality of it any easier. But in spite of the loss that runs through the story, what overshadows the sadness is the idea that we journey on, honoring those we have loved by finding new love and rejoicing in life. By doing so, we are not forgetting those we have loved. We are cherishing that love by continuing to love.

I can't imagine that other readers won't love DOG PERSON as much as I do. It's beautiful, unique and unforgettable. In a Thursday evening event in Chicago at The Book Cellar, Camille Pagán shared that she cried throughout the writing of this book and through every rewrite. This story came from a place of deep loss, and writing it helped her heal. And all along, her sweet dog was by her side, nudging her, leaning against her and comforting her. While she loves her three cats, she knows that dogs steal a special part of our hearts.

Teaser

Harold may be an aging mutt --- but Amelia May, the romance novelist who adopted him, taught him a thing or two about the human heart before she died. And she left Harold with a final task: to help her partner, Miguel, find love again. Unfortunately, the grief-ridden recluse rarely goes out, not even to the bookstore he and Amelia owned together. Now it’s in danger of going under, and to make matters even worse, a renowned author doesn’t show up for his event. Miguel and Harold set out to find the no-show and insist he fulfill his obligation. Instead they’re greeted by his sister, Fiona, who is intent on protecting her brother’s privacy. But her precocious 11-year-old daughter, who’s also named Amelia, immediately befriends Harold…and he can’t help but wonder if his Amelia was right when she said there are no coincidences in life.

Promo

Harold may be an aging mutt --- but Amelia May, the romance novelist who adopted him, taught him a thing or two about the human heart before she died. And she left Harold with a final task: to help her partner, Miguel, find love again. Unfortunately, the grief-ridden recluse rarely goes out, not even to the bookstore he and Amelia owned together. Now it’s in danger of going under, and to make matters even worse, a renowned author doesn’t show up for his event. Miguel and Harold set out to find the no-show and insist he fulfill his obligation. Instead they’re greeted by his sister, Fiona, who is intent on protecting her brother’s privacy. But her precocious 11-year-old daughter, who’s also named Amelia, immediately befriends Harold…and he can’t help but wonder if his Amelia was right when she said there are no coincidences in life.

About the Book

In this delightfully heartwarming novel, an elderly dog named Harold is determined to help his grieving owner, Miguel, find a reason to go on after loss. Now if only Miguel would stop getting in Harold’s way by being so very...human.

Harold may be an aging mutt --- but Amelia May, the romance novelist who adopted him, taught him a thing or two about the human heart before she died. And she left Harold with a final task: to help her partner, Miguel, find love again.

Unfortunately, the grief-ridden recluse rarely goes out, not even to the bookstore he and Amelia owned together. Now it’s in danger of going under, and when a renowned author doesn’t show up for his event, it pushes the store’s already precarious finances into the red. In a final attempt to save the bookstore, Miguel and Harold set out to find the no-show and insist he fulfill his obligation. But instead they’re greeted by Fiona, his sunny yet secretive sister.

Fiona is intent on protecting her brother’s privacy --- and to Harold’s horror, she doesn’t like dogs. But her precocious 11-year-old daughter, who’s also named Amelia, immediately befriends Harold...and he can’t help but wonder if his Amelia was right when she said there are no coincidences in life.

Harold is quickly running out of time to accomplish his mission, but if he can just convince his infuriatingly stubborn person to let Fiona in, he’s certain Miguel will find something far more important than a missing author: his own happy ending.

Uplifting, smartly observed and hilariously insightful, DOG PERSON is as undeniably charming as its beloved narrator, Harold, and offers a much-needed reminder that while not all love is unconditional, it is still always worthwhile.

Audiobook available, read by Mark Bramhall