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Merle's door : lessons from a freethinking dog  Cover Image Book Book

Merle's door : lessons from a freethinking dog / Ted Kerasote.

Kerasote, Ted. (Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780151012701 (hc) :
  • ISBN: 0151012709 (hc) :
  • ISBN: 9780156034500 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: 398 p. ; 24 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: Orlando : Harcourt, Inc., c2007.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (p.[365]-380) and index.
Subject: Dogs > Wyoming > Anecdotes.
Dogs > Behavior > Wyoming > Anecdotes.
Human-animal relationships > Anecdotes.
Dog owners > Wyoming > Anecdotes.
Kerasote, Ted.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.

Holds

0 current holds with 1 total copy.

Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Main 636.70929 K451m (Text) 31307016723233 Non Fiction Available -

Electronic resources


Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9780151012701
Merle's Door : Lessons from a Freethinking Dog
Merle's Door : Lessons from a Freethinking Dog
by Kerasote, Ted
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Excerpt

Merle's Door : Lessons from a Freethinking Dog

chapter 1From the WildHe came out of the night, appearing suddenly in my headlights, a big, golden dog, panting, his front paws tapping the ground in an anxious little dance. Behind him, tall cottonwoods in their April bloom. Behind the grove, the San Juan River, moving quickly, dark and swollen with spring melt. It was nearly midnight, and we were looking for a place to throw down our sleeping bags before starting our river trip in the morning. Next to me in the cab of the pickup sat Benj Sinclair, at his feet a midden of road-food wrappers smeared with the scent of corn dogs, onion rings, and burritos. Round-cheeked, Buddha-bellied, thirty-nine years old, Benj had spent his early years in the Peace Corps, in West Africa, and had developed a stomach that could digest anything. Behind him in the jump seat was Kim Reynolds, an Outward Bound instructor from Colorado known for her grace in a kayak and her long braid of brunette hair, which held the faint odor of a healthy, thirty-two-year-old woman who had sweated in the desert and hadn't used deodorant. Like Benj and me, she had eaten a dinner of pizza in Moab, Utah, a hundred miles up the road where wed met her. Like us, she gave off the scents of garlic, onions, tomato sauce, basil, oregano, and anchovies. In the car that pulled up next to us were Pam Weiss and Bennett Austin. They had driven from Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to Moab in their own car, helped us rig the raft and shop for supplies, joined us for pizza, and, like us, wore neither perfume nor cologne. Pam was thirty-six, an Olympic ski racer, and Bennett, twenty-five, was trying to keep up with her. They had recently fallen in love and exuded a mixture of endorphins and pheromones. People almost never describe other people in these terms noting first their smells for were primarily visual creatures and rely on our eyes for information. By contrast, the only really important sense-key for the big, golden dog, doing his little dance in the headlights, was our olfactory signatures, wafting to him as we opened the doors. It was for this reason--smell--that I think he trotted directly to my door, leaned his head forward cautiously, and sniffed at my bare thigh. What mix of aromas went up his long snout at that very first moment of our meeting? What atavistic memories, what possibilities were triggered in his canine worldview as he untangled the mysteries of my sweat? The big dog now appearing reddish in the interior light of the truck and without a collar took another reflective breath and studied me with excited consideration. Might it have been what I ate, and the subtle residue it left in my pores, that made him so interested in me? It was the only thing I could see (note my human use of see even while describing an olfactory phenomenon) that differentiated me from my friends. Like them, I skied, biked, and climbed, and was single. I had just turned forty-one, a compact man with chestnut hair and bright brown eyes. But when I ate meat, Excerpted from Merle's Door: Lessons from a Freethinking Dog by Ted Kerasote All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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