Rent Books

Ooooh Look at our many books! Enough to impress a king.

Rent: Merle's Door: Lessons from a Freethinking Dog

By Ted Kerasote

Overview & Description

Now including a wonderful new photo insert chronicling Merle’s life, this national bestseller explores the relationship between humans and dogs. How would dogs live if they were free? Would they stay with their human friends?

Merle and Ted found each other in the Utah desert— Merle was living wild and Ted was looking for a pup to keep him company. As their bond grew, Ted taught Merle how to live around wildlife, and Merle taught Ted about the benefits of letting a dog make his own decisions.

Using the latest in wolf research and exploring issues of animal consciousness and leadership and the origins of the human-dog relationship, Ted Kerasote takes us on the journey he and Merle shared. As much a love story as a story of independence and partnership, Merle’s Door is tender, funny, and ultimately illuminating.


Read full description

ISBN 10: 0156034506
ISBN 13: 9780156034500
416 pages.
First Published:7/2/2007
List Price:15.00
FREE to rent with membership

 

Categories this title is in
Biographies & Memoirs, Health, Mind & Body, Religion & Spirituality, Sports, Home & Garden, Entertainment, Humor, Self-Help, Personal Transformation, Animal Care & Pets, Dogs, Spirituality, Hiking & Camping

Books Written by Ted Kerasote more by this author

BookSwim Recommends

Reviews:


read more reviews

writes,

The book was thoroughly enjoyable, telling the story of the author's close relationship with a remarkable dog. It also had interesting material about the history, science, and psychology of the relationship between humans and dogs. I highly recommend it.

writes,

This was one of the best books about dogs that I have ever read. It would be nice if all dogs had a door like Merle's.

writes,

Merle's Door is the best book on a dog (or dogs) that I have ever read. Rather than becoming lengthy and told from a professional point-of-view that attempts to make sense of every behavior within accepted standards of dog behavior, Kerasote relates Merle's biography - and all the lessons it contains on both dog and human behavior and relationships - in a way that acknowledges and explains professional viewpoints and then provides insight into what dog owners actually go through with their dogs. This merges both views - the professional doctrine and the human experience with dogs - into a synthesis that is both moving and understandable. In fact, Kerasote's observations are the same kind that I have had with my border collie, Emmy. Both are dogs, but exhibit levels of higher thinking, emotion, and reason that profoundly exhibit traits that are human. I agree with every point Kerasote makes in his observations, and find Merle's tale to be an example for how all dogs should be able to live (within the capabilities of their humans, of course). If you have not read it, read it (with a box of tissues during the last few chapters). And I hope it brings you as much happiness, and an understanding of dogs as more than simply dogs, as it brought me.