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Katie Up and Down the Hall: The True Story…
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Katie Up and Down the Hall: The True Story of How One Dog Turned Five Neighbors into a Family (edition 2010)

by Glenn Plaskin

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15318178,216 (3.66)8
"The heartwarming true story of how one special cocker spaniel turned four strangers into family"--Provided by publisher.
Member:Ani36ol
Title:Katie Up and Down the Hall: The True Story of How One Dog Turned Five Neighbors into a Family
Authors:Glenn Plaskin
Info:Center Street (2010), Edition: 1, Hardcover, 272 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
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Katie Up and Down the Hall: The True Story of How One Dog Turned Five Neighbors into a Family by Glenn Plaskin

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Showing 1-5 of 18 (next | show all)
it's a charming story, but about a third in, i got tired of reading it. i got the premise though: dog lassos a group of new york apartment neighbors into a family. you knew that too, from the smart title. ( )
  mimo | Dec 18, 2023 |
In 1988, Glenn Plaskin bought a twelve-week-old cocker spaniel puppy, and named her Katie. As a first-time dog owner, he hardly knew where to begin, but a mutual friend introduced him to his neighbors down the hall in his Battery Park City apartment building, Pearl and Arthur. This older couple were life-long dog owners, and their last dog, a cocker spaniel named Brandy, had died two years earlier. Unprepared to get a new dog at this late stage of their lives, Pearl in particular is more than willing to help Glenn learn how to be a dog owner, and provide dog-sitting services.

It's not long before Glenn, Pearl, Arthur, and Katie start to build a bond a good deal closer than friendly neighbors. Arthur and Pearl were never able to have children, and Glenn's family, while close emotionally, is not close geographically. Pearl becomes another grandmother for Glenn, and a vital part of Katie's life, since she can't (usually!) accompany him to the office. Katie is a pampered darling, but a sweet, cooperative dog as well, and the fun grows when, as an indirect result of Glenn's work as a newspaper columnist, Katie starts to get modeling jobs.

And then Glenn's life runs full speed into a brick wall. The paper he works for is sold, and he's among the many let go. With all the other newspaper people on the job market at the same time, he's not having any success finding a new job. While he's still looking, his long-standing back trouble worsens dramatically, leaving him too disabled to work. He's getting physical therapy and attending a support group at a local community center--and Katie, accompanying him to the center, expands his family once again. She starts playing with six-year-old Ryan, and Glenn forms a friendship with Ryan's single dad, John. Coincidentally, John wants to move to someplace that will give him a less stressful and demanding commute, and an apartment becomes available in Glenn's building, on the same hall. Pearl becomes a friend and confidant to John and a grandmother to Ryan, and the three households bind together. They're in and out of each other's apartments, having "family" dinners together on a regular basis, and celebrating birthdays together. When Glenn is recovered enough to work again, he gets a job with Family Circle, and one of his feature articles is "Grandma Down the Hall," about the family they've created together.

It isn't all high spirits and fun. They're in the residential building closest to the Twin Towers. They live through the terror of realizing what's happened, fleeing the expanding debris cloud, and slowly rebuilding their lives and waiting out the time until they can return to their apartments. Also, Pearl and Arthur are in their late seventies when we meet them, and Katie is a dog, so in one sense the ending is no surprise. Glenn Plaskin makes Katie and his human neighbors come alive on the page, though, and while the ending is natural and inevitable, it's also deeply moving. Honestly, I cried through most of the last two chapters.

This is not a depressing book, though. It's warm and engaging and hopeful, and a must-read whether or not you're a "dog person."

Highly recommended.

I bought this book in ebook format.

You can read more of my reviews at Lis Carey's Library ( )
  LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
A fun and heartwarming story about a real life situation. ( )
  RodgerA | Oct 6, 2016 |
Okay well I am posting after reading this book and I have to tell you that I found this story lacking on a lot of levels. I do not mind the doting owner but what I do mind is that he just dropped a lot of names and I just did not connect from him. I did feel that the story was more about the other characters then anything else and I feel that Katie was left out of the story. Wasn't it her book? I also felt that Glenn's story was needed in order to understand other parts of the book. I am just not sure I ever connected throughout the book so it was a fail for me.
( )
  Angel.Carter | Aug 11, 2016 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
In the spirit of all good animal memoirs, 'Katie' delivers a heart-warming tale of animal friendship. As Katie opens her owner's heart, she also brings together an eclectic group of neighbors who live in her apartment building. This is the type of story that reminds us that family isn't always blood, and often comes on four legs as well as two.
  GondorGirl | Jun 1, 2014 |
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"The heartwarming true story of how one special cocker spaniel turned four strangers into family"--Provided by publisher.

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The heartwarming true story of how one special cocker spaniel turned four strangers into family.
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