EBOOK

One Nation Under Dog

Adventures in the New World of Prozac-Popping Puppies, Dog-Park Politics, and Organic Pet Food

Michael Schaffer
(0)
Pages
304
Year
2009
Language
English

About

A witty, insightful, and affectionate examination of how and why we spend billions on our pets, and what this tells us about ourselves.

In 2003, Michael Schaffer and his wife drove to a rural shelter and adopted an emaciated, dreadlocked Saint Bernard who they named Murphy. They vowed that they'd never become the kind of people who send dogs named Baxter and Sonoma out to get facials, or shell out for $12,000 hip replacements. But then, they started to get weird looks from the in-laws: You hired a trainer. Your vet prescribed antidepressants. So, Schaffer started poking around and before long happened on an astonishing statistic: the pet industry, estimated at $43-billion this year, was just $17-billion barely a decade earlier.

One Nation Under Dog is about America's pet obsession, the explosion, over the past generation, of an industry full of pet masseuses, professional dog-walkers, organic kibble, leash-law militants, luxury pet spas, veterinary grief counselors, upscale dog shampoos, and the like, a booming economy that is evidence of tremendous and rapid change in the status of America's pets. Schaffer provides a surprising and lively portrait of our country, as how we treat our pets reflects evolving ideas about domesticity, consumerism, politics, and family-through this fabulously reported and sympathetic look at both us and our dogs.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"A Fast Food Nation for dog lovers, this astute and amusing investigative report offers a 'journey into the $41-billion-a-year world of the modern American pet.'… Reminiscent of Tom Wolfe's New Journalism essays on the sociology of pop culture.… Essential reading for anyone whose dog has become hooked on Kong bounce balls."
Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
"Combines research and great … anecdotes for … sociological insight into the obsessive world of dog ownership."
Philadelphia Magazine
"Informative, entertaining.... As the man says in this terrific book, it's not about the dogs, it's about the people."
Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post

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