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                                  Pennac, Daniel.  2004.  DOG. New York:  Candlewick Press.  ISBN 0763624217  
                                 		
                                 DOG is a really warm and tender dog's point of view book about a canine named Dog and how he tames a human girl child. He
                                    eventually learns to trust life with those hard to understand humans.  Dog's early canine history is full of much mistreatment.
                                    He manages to have two dog friends named Black Nose and Woolly who influence him as a puppy and who give him the courage to
                                    keep looking for a place where he can thrive as a pet.  Short chapters make the journey of Dog as homeless abandoned pup to
                                    lap dog a story that makes you want to finish this book.  Dog's mistress, Plum, is also in need of learning a few life lessons
                                    along the way.  In her own opposite fashion she has been coddled, pampered and indulged and alternately ignored by two hapless
                                    parents.  How the girl child and the canine help each other learn about treating other creatures makes this book both funny
                                    and touching.  
                                     
                                     The only section that does not quite ring true is when Dog travels with Hyena to a place called the Dog Cemetery.  He
                                    encounters a "secret" kingdom where dearly departed pets are memorialized.  Since Dog throughout this book encounters
                                    one grueling experience after the other with the fickle state of humanity, the cemetery is supposed to be a counterweight
                                    but to what effect is unclear.  The chapters devoted to the cemetery seem clumped together.  What works better is how Plum's
                                    love for him forces her to be something not so erratic, so headstrong and so self-possessed.  After Dog escapes from her fickle
                                    clutches, the scene where she pleads for a second chance is both melodramatic and very moving to the reader.  
                                     
                                  
                                 
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