Author picture

Maria Goodavage

Author of Soldier Dogs

10 Works 737 Members 27 Reviews

About the Author

Maria Goodavage is a journalist, author, and editor. She has worked with USA Today and the San Francisco Chronicle. She is known for writing and editing at Dogster.com, where she publishes a blog entitled, "For the Love of Dog". She is also the author of four books, focusing on the relationship show more that dog owners have with their pets. On April 5, 2012, her book, Soldier Dogs: The Untold Story of America¿s Canine Heroes was recorded at #15 on the Publishers Weekly Bestsellers list. On March 27, 2012, she appeared on The Daily Show, with Jon Stewart. Some of her works also include: The Dog Lover's Companion to the San Francisco Bay Area: The Inside Scoop on Where to Take Your Dog in the Bay Area & Beyond, The Dog Lover's Companion to California: The Inside Scoop on Where to Take Your Dog and Top Dog: The Story of Marine Hero Lucca which made the New York Times bestselling list in 2014. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Works by Maria Goodavage

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

27 reviews
Although I'm a sucker for a any good dog story, I think anyone interested in the military will appreciate this well written examination of how dogs serve war efforts. The discussion of dogs as 'equipment', as they are defined by the bureaucracy of the government, versus how handlers and the public view dogs is well examined. I can pretty much guarantee that a dog book will put me into tears--but this one, thankfully, only had a few moments. I can't quite explain why, for certainly the love show more between the dogs and soldiers were deep in the various stories. The dogs and handlers, surprisingly, are only deployed for relatively short times before being re-assigned: different handlers to different dogs. As someone who raised guide dogs, and was told by the trainers that dogs only had two to three strong bonds in them, this was an interesting difference--the types of work of course require very different personalities of dogs.

As with almost all books regarding how people work with dogs, here's another fine example of how dogs serve us in amazing ways--in this case, not only serve, but selflessly give up their lives to protect us for something as simple as a scratch behind the ears or a toss of a toy. It is about time Soldier Dogs had their story told. Thank you Maria Goodavage
show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
dogs, military, training, value

An absorbing and in depth telling about the training, lives, and work of the alphabet soup of military dogs and their handlers (primarily the US branches) by a trained observer, a journalist. The process of choosing dogs with the needed inclinations, temperament, and appropriate physical characteristics, the training of dogs and handlers makes good reading. Then there are tidbits like the use of Jack Russell terriers by the USN on submarines! The writing style show more is easy while informative, and seems nicely organized.
Nicole Vilencia narrates this with a pleasant tone and an easy cadence, thus enhancing the book.
show less
This is a really enjoyable and informative look at the expanding roles dogs are playing in human health care around the world.

It starts with dogs who are learning to sniff cancer in humans. This is something that started with people's own pets alerting to Something Very Wrong in some part of their owner's body, with the "something wrong" proving to be cancer. It took a while before anecdotal accounts of such incidents began to get the attention of doctors and medical researchers willing and show more able to follow up on it. This led to to testing dogs on samples that either did, or did not, contain samples of cancer.

This hasn't, and isn't likely to, lead to dogs in doctors' offices sniffing you to determine whether you have cancer. This could be stressful for both the patients and the dogs. What researchers working towards is the identification of exactly what dogs are smelling whtn they detect cancer, and whether they can develop a device to detect those chemicals.

That's only one example of how dogs help us. Goodavage takes us on a globe-hopping tour of how dogs can help us in a wide variety of ways. She meets dogs who help people who have seizures. Currently dogs can't be trained to alert to seizures, but they can be trained to respond to them in ways that keep them safe and help them recover faster. However, many seizure response dogs, after spending enough time with their person, do start alerting to seizures, giving them more time to get to a safe position and be calm and settled before the seizure starts. We don't know what the dogs are detecting,, yet, that signals the coming seizure, but we may eventually figure it out, and be able to train seizure alert dogs.

Guide dogs and mobility assistance dogs are of course the most familiar. Many of us have sseen them, out with their people, essential to the rather critical task of simply getting around safely, There are many other service dogs, newer and less familiar. Diabetes alert dogs can be life-saving, especially for those with Type 1 diabetes, which typically doesn't respond to diet control as Type 1 diabetes often does. Dogs trained to alert to high blood sugar or to dangerously low blood sugar, and can be life-saving additions to their people's lives.

Dogs can often make a lifechanging difference in the lives of autistic people, especially when the autistic person is a child with serious communication difficulties or frequent meltdowns due to sensory issues. Not entirely unrelated, dogs can also be very helpful, even vital, for people with PTSD, serious depression, panic attacks, and other mental health issue that impair the ability to live a normal life.(Full disclosure: For the last nine years, I had a service dog who made it possible for me to leave the house and be functional rather than having panic attacks. She died recently, but I'm currently in the process of getting a successor for her.)

Therapy dogs trained to provide comfort and emotional relief to people who have gone through a major crisis, sometimes losing everything they had in a natural disaster, are dogs helping in a more familiar way. Goodavage talks about both the "professional" comfort dots, and the comfort, support, and reason to keep living that our beloved "just pets" can give us.

That's just a quick and not very deep overview of dogs and the help they can give us that Goodavage covers in more depth and greater detail and understanding in this book. The stories included introduce us to wonderful dogs, excellent people, and very moving accounts of how we and dogs can work together to make our lives both happier and healthier.

Recommended.

I bought this audiobook.
show less
If you've ever wondered about Military Working Dogs, this is a book for you. In a clear, conversational style, Maria Goodavage draws you into her exploration of how military dogs are selected, how they're trained, what they do, what kind of care they're given, and what happens to them when their working days are over.

A dog lover herself, Ms Goodavage addresses concerns and questions, including the philosophical/ethical ones of deploying dogs in war. She manages to incorporate an amazing show more number of facts, both big and little (such as why bloodhounds with their superior noses are not used), interspersed with stories of handlers and dogs. She explains terminology and rationale for military decisions, making the information easily accessible to non-military readers.

The stories of these hero dogs and their hero handlers are interesting and touching, and some of them are difficult and very sad. Although from time to time Ms Goodavage mentions dogs who have served in previous wars, most of the stories were obtained from very recent interviews, so the focus is on Iraq and especially Afghanistan. Photographs are a wonderful addition to the book.

As well as providing a great deal of information in a very readable format, and answering many questions, this book is a lovely tribute to those brave dogs and their human handlers who have saved so many lives, sometimes at the expense of their own.
show less
½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Clint Hill Foreword
Phil Frank Illustrator

Statistics

Works
10
Members
737
Popularity
#34,455
Rating
3.9
Reviews
27
ISBNs
56
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs