
Gwen Bailey
Author of What Is My Cat Thinking?: The Essential Guide to Understanding Pet Behavior
About the Author
Gwen Bailey is The Blue Cross Animal Welfare Society's (Britain's largest animal aid organization) Animal Behaviourist and Chairman of the Association of Pet Behaviour Counsellors.
Works by Gwen Bailey
What Is My Cat Thinking?: The Essential Guide to Understanding Pet Behavior (2002) 259 copies, 4 reviews
What Is My Dog Thinking?: The Essential Guide to Understanding Pet Behavior (2002) 166 copies, 3 reviews
The Beginner's Dog Training Guide: How to Train a Superdog, Step by Step (DK Practical Pet Guides) (2022) 16 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- dog trainer
- Nationality
- UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
There are some lovely photographs here, but no real new information. I like the format enough that I'd recommend it for an elementary or middle school library, but if you are looking for fresh insights into your own cat's behaviour, look to Desmond Morris instead.
I found this book under an end table while I was packing and got "sucked in." I like that the book focuses on body language and includes copious images to illustrate. Although the author's intent is not to "anthropomorphize" cats, to that end she takes a tone that sort of conveys cats as emotionless or wholly driven by instinct. Her approach, which I've encountered before and don't particularly like, is something along the lines of, "A cat sits on your lap because your lap is the most comfy show more place, not because she likes you," and "Your cat is more attached to her 'territory' than you, and probably wouldn't care if someone else moved in as long as the territory stayed the same." Ouch!
At the same time, all the sections have little titles like, "I don't like this," or "She seems nice," that sort of go against the author's no-anthropomorphizing intent. It also gets a little repetitive, as if the editor just shrugged off redundancy. Still, it's a decent primer, and I like the level of detail she gives to cats' "scent-marking" behaviors in particular (rubbing against humans, objects, etc.) show less
At the same time, all the sections have little titles like, "I don't like this," or "She seems nice," that sort of go against the author's no-anthropomorphizing intent. It also gets a little repetitive, as if the editor just shrugged off redundancy. Still, it's a decent primer, and I like the level of detail she gives to cats' "scent-marking" behaviors in particular (rubbing against humans, objects, etc.) show less
Nice little book. Great pictures that go along with the explanation of what the posture and behavior indicate. Not as beefy with other books that discuss dog psychology, how to recognize behavior and then more on what to do with the dog, but nevertheless good for what it is.
A mostly good basic book for new dog guardians. The explanation of what to do when puppy has bad socialisation experiences is far too brief and neglects to mention some important points for successful rehabilitation. Contains a reference to dominance aggression that is incorrect and adds to the myth that dogs are intent upon dominating humans. Also perpetuates the myth that dogs want to please us, whereas dogs, like all creatures, do something because there's something in it for them. show more Disappointing to see the use of corrections with no mention of practical ways to prevent the problem in the first place. show less
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 37
- Members
- 967
- Popularity
- #26,625
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 11
- ISBNs
- 115
- Languages
- 13













