Wonder Club world wonders pyramid logo
×

Reviews for The Lost Dogs: Michael Vick's Dogs and Their Tale of Rescue and Redemption

 The Lost Dogs magazine reviews

The average rating for The Lost Dogs: Michael Vick's Dogs and Their Tale of Rescue and Redemption based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-11-28 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 4 stars Seth Leblanc
UPDATED: 03/19/11 Read. Cried. Read some more. Got seriously pissed off. Read some more and finished on a bittersweet note. The Lost Dogs tells the tale of a landmark dog-fighting case, the swirl of celebrity politics surrounding it, and the precedent-setting processes and activities that were developed to rescue and rehabilitate the dogs - for the first time viewed as victims, not evidence; saved, not destroyed. The facts it reveals about pit bulls were and still are critical to advancing the anti-cruelty, anti-BSL and animal welfare movements. Well-told, not flabby like a lot of non-fiction (Gorant's journalistic style is ideal for the material). A hard read, in the emotional sense, but not as hard as you might anticipate or fear. Gorant's scenario-setting from the POV of 'the little red dog' and 'the little brown dog' (who turns out to be cover-dog, Sweet Jasmine) occasionally strays into anthropomorphism, but I think he strikes exactly the right balance for the vast majority of readers and his purpose in telling the story, too. There's enough pathos and sadness to make you feel for and bond with the dogs--the subjects of his tale. This is a better, more ethical and more constructive approach than dredging up anger as the primary emotion, which would be the case had he chosen to focus on the criminal-celebrity on the other side of the case and/or his supporters. I have an immense amount of respect for that strategy, both here in literary terms as well as in the broader context of pit bull advocacy and education. Gorant is clear, at the outset, that he wanted to write the book to address the main and most frequent argument offered up by Vick defenders: "they're just dogs; why do they matter?" Anyone reading my threads here or on FB knows my response to that so I won't belabour the point. I'll end by saying: this is an important book. Vick's cruelty and celebrity created an alchemy that, ironically, has served this breed well, providing a high-profile focal point that advocacy groups like Best Friends and Bad Rap could use to reach the broader population and dispel the myths, misperceptions and realities of 'pit bulls', human beings' relationships with them and dogs in general, and our responsibilities to them. With this book and their work, the tide may be turning. ___________________________ Some preliminary thoughts. This topic is weighing on my mind these days as I watch my 14-year-old Wheaten Terrier decline, and think about what's next in terms of dog ownership for me. I read the Sports Illustrated article upon which this book was based, and almost immediately afterwards, started to follow badrap.org. Bad Rap is the pit bull rescue group out of California which--along with a group of other forward-thinking and rational lawmakers, humane society workers, rescuers and volunteers--turned the atrocity of what Vick brought to light, the horrid underbelly, history and current situation of dogfighting and of this breed, in particular, to something good. Learned a ton, in the process, about pit bulls, to the point where I now want to adopt one, but can't. Here in Ontario where I live, there is province-wide, breed-specific legislation that prohibits the breeding and severely restricts the owning of any pit bull or "pit-bull-like" dog (yes, the legislation is that broad). The legislation also requires sterilization of all existing dogs -- pit bull terriers, am. staffordshire terriers and mixes. Any dog that bears even a trace or whiff of pit bull. The reality of this law in practice is that any pit bull rescued in Ontario is euthanized immediately, if it can't be found an appropriate, out-of-province foster home. What this means is that rescues of pit bulls in Ontario are dwindling to a trickle. Go on petfinder.org and type in pit bull, Ontario and all you will see are pleas for funds to ship rescued dogs out of province, by a few--very few--non-profits and shelters who continue valiantly to rescue the breed. Most Ontario pit bull and "pit-bull-like" dogs are euthanized immediately, regardless of temperament, situation or history. The effort and cost is too exorbitant to even attempt rescue, much less rehabilitation. But worse -- far worse -- dogs are still being fought and bred to fight, with efforts to stop this barbaric and inhumane practice underfunded and unsupported. Whoever is breeding pit bulls in Ontario now is doing so for one purpose--dog fighting--and doing it underground, way beneath the radar. In his review of The Lost Dogs, Cesar Milan (The Dog Whisperer) quotes Malcolm Gladwell, who says: "Dogs who bite people are vicious because they have owners who want vicious dogs." The battered and abused dogs that are rescued from dog-fight operations in Ontario, if any are, will have been bred to fight; their rehabilitation that much more problematic and resource-intensive. It would take a Herculean effort -- and a high profile case such as Vick's -- to correct the incorrect assumptions about this breed, replace ignorance with fact, and turn the tide of public opinion. It's pretty much a lost cause. Along with it, we are losing a breed of dog that, WHEN BRED AND OWNED RESPONSIBLY (yes, I'm yelling), are among the most affectionate with humans and the most temperamentally stable -- ironically, specifically because they have been bred to be fight dogs (read the article(s) to learn why that is true). In the American Temperament Test, pit bull terriers score higher than golden retrievers. Of the Vick dogs that were not too far gone, either physically or emotionally, when they were rescued, 48 out of 49 dogs were stable enough temperamentally to either be fostered/adopted out or kept in a sanctuary. Only one -- "a female who had been forcibly bred to the point where she was irredeemably violent" -- note, BRED not FOUGHT -- had to be euthanized for behavioural reasons. Read more here: The Lost Dogs
Review # 2 was written on 2017-04-13 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 4 stars Matthew Pierce
Phew. This could easily turn into a rage review on my hatred for Michael Vick, even now all these years later. The beginning of this book is VERY graphic and hard to swallow and only added gasoline to my fire. I understand that he did his time, and he now has become an advocate for dogs, giving speeches and talking to people about the evils of dog-fighting. But actually reading just how involved he was in all of it (not only funding and watching the fights, but being one of the people to murder the dogs) just made me sick. I knew the dogs were being killed but reading just how they were killed upset me- I will not give examples, as I cannot even begin to type it without getting teary. But this isn't about Vick, it's about the dogs. So let's talk about the dogs. =) The one good thing about a celebrity being the one to be involved in this horrific crime is the huge spotlight it put on the dogs. If Michael Vick wasn't an NFL star, the dogs would have most likely all been euthanized the minute they were seized. The hatred of pitbulls in this country just astounds me. I have worked with pits and they are one of the best breeds. The media portrays them in such an ugly light and people just automatically pin them as mindless killing machines. I don't know of anyone personally who has been killed or injured by a pit. I understand people have, I'm not making light of it. But I have a scar on my lip from being bit in the face by a neighbor's cocker spaniel. And sadly, I know of a little girl who was so viciously bitten that she needed reconstructive surgery. The dog who did it? Her own golden retriever. The dog's individual stories started out so heartbreaking but continued to be more and more uplifting as the book went on. The end statistics are so amazing to me: of the 51 dogs rescued from the Vick compound, only 1 had to be euthanized due to over-aggressiveness. 2 had to be put down for medical reasons. The remaining dogs went on to foster homes, forever homes, to become therapy dogs. The resilience of these animals is nothing short of amazing.


Click here to write your own review.


Login

  |  

Complaints

  |  

Blog

  |  

Games

  |  

Digital Media

  |  

Souls

  |  

Obituary

  |  

Contact Us

  |  

FAQ

CAN'T FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR? CLICK HERE!!!