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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Saturday, April 28, 2007 1:29 am by M. in    No comments
Yes, not only the Brontë family, but the Brontë pets can be characters of a book:

Dreaming in Libro

How a Good Dog Tamed a Bad Woman

by Louise Bernikow

Jun 11, 2007
Hardcover
ISBN: 9780738210964
ISBN-10: 073821096X
Published by Da Capo Press

Description

A woman meets an amber-eyed, sixty-pound boxer in a city park and falls in love. Their first year honeymoon was a discovery of each other’s idiosyncrasies-morning dog or evening dog? Television watcher or reader? Then life settles into routine and the once rebelliously high-spirited, independent woman and her bilingual comedian of a dog realize that they’re “happily stuck with each other.” In this witty, sharp memoir, Louise Bernikow charts eight years with Libro the boxer as they travel through Manhattan...and that thing called Life. From book tours to beach houses, from Libro’s training as pet therapist after 9/11 to his escapades on the campaign trail, Louise plays “Jack” to Libro’s “Jackie.” But as Louise all too soon discovers, the stray she rescued is domesticating her. A book about a modern family of two, about joy and grief, and realizing that the life you’ve made (even if it doesn’t include a wedding ring) is more than enough, Dreaming in Libro will bring a wagging tail to any reader.

We read on Publishers Weekly:
This sweet sequel to Bark if You Love Me, in which Bernikow first introduced her beloved brown boxer, Libro (adopted in the late ’90s after he was rescued by the police), relates their subsequent adventures living in Manhattan. Libro relished apartment life even in a five-floor walkup, making friends with the neighbors (“it takes a building to raise a dog”) and endearing himself to Bernikow’s friends. So urban was Libro that he had difficulty adjusting to a month’s vacation in the Hamptons and refused to go in the water. Although clearly smitten with her dog, Bernikow leavens her adoration with references to literary figures and their pets, such as Virginia Woolf’s Pinka and Emily Brontë’s Keeper. She also delivers a humorous account of the book tour for Bark if You Love Me, which included paw stamping by Libro as well as autographing by Bernikow at bookstores. But Bernikow’s bout with cancer, during which Libro barely left her side, was followed by the dog’s own diagnosis with a tumor soon after his ninth birthday,. Bernikow describes her intense pain after losing her beloved companion, which she marked with a postmortem party for friends and admirers.
In the picture: Keeper-from life (24 April 1838) by Emily Brontë

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