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Talking to Animals

How You Can Understand Animals and They Can Understand You

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
New York Times bestselling author Jon Katz—"a Thoreau for modern times" (San Antonio Express-News)—offers us a deeper understanding of the inner lives of animals and teaches us how we can more effectively communicate with them, made real by his own remarkable experiences with a wide array of creatures great and small.
In Talking to Animals, journalist Jon Katz—who left his Manhattan life behind two decades ago for life on a farm where he is surrounded by dogs, cats, sheep, horses, cows, goats, and chickens—marshals his experience to offer us a deeper insight into animals and the tools needed for effectively communicating with them.

Devoting each chapter to a specific animal from his life, Katz tells funny and illuminating stories about his profound experiences with them, showing us how healthy engagement with animals falls into five key areas: Food, Movement, Visualization, Language, and Instincts. Along the way, we meet Simon the donkey who arrives at Katz's farm near death and now serves as his Tai Chi partner. We meet Red the dog who started out antisocial and untrained and is now a therapy dog working with veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan. And we meet Winston, the dignified and brave rooster who was injured defending his hens from a hawk and who has better interpersonal skills than most humans.

Thoughtful and intelligent, lively and powerful, this book will completely change the way you think about and interact with animals. Katz's "honest, straightforward, and sometimes searing prose will speak to those who love animals, and might well convert some who do not" (Booklist).
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 19, 2016
      Bestseller Katz (Saving Simon) fills his latest book with moving essays on what he has learned from different animals. Each story combines biographies of beloved animals with guidance on how humans can better communicate with them, conveying Katz’s message that humans must respect animals for what they are before real connections can be made. To begin a successful relationship, Katz urges readers to “consistently imagine and visualize the behavior seek from dog, and over time, the dog senses it, understands it, and then internalizes it.” Katz’s visualization process, based on the work by animal behaviorist Temple Grandin on how animals perceive the world, comes across as thought-sharing with animals. When Katz has to choose whether to permanently confine Orson, a border collie, or put him down, the communication between the two—and a visualization of Orson by a stream—allows Katz to release Orson. Katz is most successful when relating the sometimes heartbreaking stories of animals or urging readers to consider how animals perceive the world; he’s less skilled at providing concrete tools to learn to better interact with the animals in our own lives.

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2017
      Forget about ordering your dog to sit. Instead, breathe, imagine, visualize.We're not in the tough-hided world of Temple Grandin here: Katz (Saving Simon: How a Rescue Donkey Taught Me the Meaning of Compassion, 2015, etc.) is a soft-hearted, warm advocate for animals of all kinds, and he's disinclined to use tried-and-true methods of demand and reward. Of one dog, he writes, "I had no commands to give Rose, no words, but I had images and I painted a sketch in my head of what I wanted to happen." That's about as New Age-y as it gets, but it helps explain why just about every town in America now sports a business for pet psychiatrists and animal communicators. It's when the animals start talking back that things get a little weird, as when said dog supposedly remarked, "I can do it, give me a chance to succeed." A little of this goes a long way, and there's a lot of it--a lot of what Katz calls "sweet noise." Still, the author chronicles many affecting encounters with animals, and it is indisputable that, as Katz observes, animals are disappearing from our lives, "vanishing at a horrific rate." For all the tender moments and divinations of body language--a horse with its head down is not fearful but relaxed--the author is capable of righteous fire. When it comes to Bill de Blasio and the ban on carriage horses in New York, circuses, and such, he gets his dander up: "It has become a popular idea in America, this notion that it is cruel for working animals to work with people, exploitive for animals to uplift or entertain people." It seems a curious mix of purposes to want to talk with bunnies on one hand and draft animals on the other, but it's of a piece with Katz's particular brand of advocacy, which has many supporters. Animal lovers with a bent for the woo-woo will enjoy this well-intended but often cloying book.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2017

      Best-selling author Katz (A Good Dog; Izzy &Lenore; Saving Simon) has written another heartfelt book about his deeply personal relationship with animals. He starts with describing his childhood growing up poor in an immigrant neighborhood, being bullied, and experiencing a quarrelsome and abusive family life. His stories about the dogs he encountered in particular will have readers relating to the emotional bonds that develop between human and animal. Katz goes on to discusses attachment theory--the study of the dynamics of long-term relationships and feelings in human beings--and applies this to our relationships with our pets, suggesting that intimate interactions with dogs replay early human emotional development. He states that people generally treat dogs and other pets in one of two ways: the way they were treated as small children, or the way they wish they had been treated. VERDICT Katz has a long and sincere involvement with understanding the human/animal bond; his title is recommended for general audiences. [See Prepub Alert, 11/21/16.]--Edell Marie Schaefer, Brookfield P.L., WI

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2017
      Katz, author of many books about dogs (The Second Chance Dog, 2014) and other animals (Saving Simon, 2015), here takes a different tack. As he writes, this is not a how-to book but rather a journey to a deeper understanding of our companion animals. It also doubles as a spiritual quest. Beginning with Lucky, the puppy he got as a boy because he was the first in line to adopt, Katz tells illuminating stories about why he chose each animal and what that animal taught him. Lucky showed him that a lonely boy could have more resilience than he thought. Julius the Labrador oversaw his transition to full-time writer. Elvis, an enormous Brown Swiss steer, inspired Katz to take his ideas about communication to a new level and helped him learn when to let go. Border collie Rose taught him to be strong, and Central Park carriage horses taught him that animals like to work. Katz's honest, straightforward, and sometimes searing prose will speak to those who love animals, and might well convert some who do not.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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