From the Publisher
"Readers will be delighted... This entertaining and lighthearted look at the life of a woman who took control of her own future is a perfect nonfiction crossover for fans of British chick lit like that of Sophie Kinsella." — Booklist (starred review)
“It made me laugh, it made me cry, it made me long for a dog! Incredibly moving, very funny and wonderfully wise, this is a brilliant debut memoir and a beacon of hope when we need it most. I shall be recommending it to everyone I know, dog-loving or otherwise.” — Annie Lyons, author of the bestseller The Brilliant Life of Eudora Honeysett
“This is a glorious treasure of book starring a cornucopia of canines and their hapless humans. It tickles the funnybone and tugs at the heartstrings. Hugely entertaining.” — Ruth Hogan, author of the bestseller The Keeper of Lost Things
“A joy from start to finish. I loved it.” — Stacey Halls, author of The Familiars
“With gentle humor, this charming coming-of-age story captures the ups and downs of a young woman defining life on her own terms…warmly uplifting and wise.” — Kirkus Reviews
“ Sparkles with humor, joy and wit. If MacDougall is as skilled with dogs as she is with a pen, it’s no wonder her agency became number one. London’s Number One Dog-Walking Agency bounds along with the energy of a rambunctious pup and exudes the wisdom of a beloved canine with an old soul (you know the type). ” — BookPage
"MacDougall's fun, brisk storytelling and cleverly rendered details largely focus on growing, improving upon and sustaining her business. However, philosophical undercurrents profoundly define how workand canine companionshipcan enrich the soul and spirit, ultimately giving shape and form to living a more meaningful existence." — Shelf Awareness
"A really lovely book for dog lovers." — #1 international bestselling author Jilly Cooper
Annie Lyons
It made me laugh, it made me cry, it made me long for a dog! Incredibly moving, very funny and wonderfully wise, this is a brilliant debut memoir and a beacon of hope when we need it most. I shall be recommending it to everyone I know, dog-loving or otherwise.
Booklist (starred review)
"Readers will be delighted... This entertaining and lighthearted look at the life of a woman who took control of her own future is a perfect nonfiction crossover for fans of British chick lit like that of Sophie Kinsella."
Shelf Awareness
"MacDougall's fun, brisk storytelling and cleverly rendered details largely focus on growing, improving upon and sustaining her business. However, philosophical undercurrents profoundly define how workand canine companionshipcan enrich the soul and spirit, ultimately giving shape and form to living a more meaningful existence."
BookPage
“ Sparkles with humor, joy and wit. If MacDougall is as skilled with dogs as she is with a pen, it’s no wonder her agency became number one. London’s Number One Dog-Walking Agency bounds along with the energy of a rambunctious pup and exudes the wisdom of a beloved canine with an old soul (you know the type). ”
#1 international bestselling author Jilly Cooper
"A really lovely book for dog lovers."
Stacey Halls
A joy from start to finish. I loved it.
Ruth Hogan
This is a glorious treasure of book starring a cornucopia of canines and their hapless humans. It tickles the funnybone and tugs at the heartstrings. Hugely entertaining.
Kirkus Reviews
2021-04-29
A British freelance journalist’s story about starting a dog-walking business that took her out of a post-college rut and into the contentment of a settled life.
MacDougall was a bored sales assistant at Sotheby’s when she asked herself two significant questions: “Is this it?...This is adulthood?” After accidentally destroying clay pigeons awaiting valuation, she decided to take a chance on another career: dog-walking. People who knew about her plans to start her own dog-walking service—including her mother, who believed all the author needed was a husband—raised their eyebrows. Yet MacDougall forged ahead, thrilled to work with creatures who reveled in their “perfectly uncomplicated” lives. What she had yet to learn was that the dogs she loved were attached to owners, each with their own neuroses. Some dogs required “a full bath and a blow dry after every walk,” and one owner asked the author to use a Baby Björn to take the dog to the park. One client gave MacDougall a “bullet-pointed list” of what her “strict Hindu,” Italian-bred cocker spaniel could and couldn’t do, including eat beef. As the author’s small business grew, so did she. She married her boyfriend and taught him to like dogs, survived a global recession and employed other dog-walkers, and got pregnant and learned about motherhood, which “leaves you like a half-open wound, vulnerable and exposed, your nerves eviscerated, your heart on the butcher’s block.” Then, without regret, MacDougall turned over her business to someone else and went to live in the country, “knee-deep” in children, dogs, and the simple pleasures of family life. With gentle humor, this charming coming-of-age story captures the ups and downs of a young woman defining a life on her own terms. The narrative also celebrates dogs as the delightful garnish on the “huge, messy…stew” of urban life.
Warmly uplifting and wise.