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Reviews tagging 'Suicidal thoughts'
The Purest Bond: Understanding the Human-Canine Connection by Jen Golbeck, Stacey Colino
3 reviews
zydecovivo's review
emotional
informative
lighthearted
reflective
slow-paced
4.5
This is a book I saw thanks to a bookstagram influencer. I own a foster-fail rescue dog myself and knew I needed to read it. While not previously familiar with Jen Golbeck’s social media influence, I appreciated her background in dog rescue, fostering, and hospice care. I can tell that she loves helping the dogs that come through her home. The book itself is a mix of personal anecdotes from Jen, stories from third-party contributors, and scientific research. While I think this was the correct way to write the book, I listened to the audiobook version and found my attention drifting in and out. Jen was the narrator, and, while her voice wasn’t displeasing, I think this book lends itself to having many voices. Even if the subjects of the third-party stories didn’t want to speak, having a male and second female voice for those quotes would’ve helped keep the audio a tad more interesting.
The information in the book is interesting, though I’d argue mostly common knowledge for any long-time dog owner. This is another book that may be useful to keep as a reference since each section corresponds to each stage in a dog’s life with a human. We tend to forget the phases of life for dogs with each new one, so a refresher between dogs and during phase transitions could be helpful for dog owners. As a bit of warning for other listeners, Part 4 deals explicitly with dog death. It wasn’t labeled in my audio version and thus had me crying uncontrollably on a Monday morning. Thank goodness I was working from home.
Graphic: Grief, Animal death, and Animal cruelty
Minor: Suicidal thoughts and Self harm
ninahuynh's review
emotional
funny
informative
medium-paced
5.0
Very informative and engaging! The topic itself is an interesting one, but the way Golbeck and Colino dive into different aspects of human-canine connections (from interacting with children to health benefits) really sold me. The sections about how a dog acts and how certain behaviours can be interpreted made me feel nearly ready to adopt a canine friend!
Minor: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Suicidal thoughts, Ableism, Death, Mental illness, Self harm, Cancer, and Chronic illness
lindseyag23's review against another edition
emotional
hopeful
informative
lighthearted
fast-paced
5.0
Moderate: Animal death, Grief, and Mental illness
Minor: Bullying, Suicidal thoughts, Eating disorder, Pregnancy, Self harm, Injury/Injury detail, Cancer, Chronic illness, Panic attacks/disorders, Terminal illness, Car accident, Grief, Medical content, Toxic relationship, Dementia, Domestic abuse, and Pandemic/Epidemic
The book discusses how dogs (and to a lesser extent other pets) help people who experience many of these content warnings- nothing particularly graphic. There are 2 chapters regarding aging and death of pets, again nothing graphic.
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