Stanley and Sophie

Stanley and Sophie

by Kate Jennings
Stanley and Sophie

Stanley and Sophie

by Kate Jennings

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Overview

"I fell in love with a prideful, tense bundle of muscle and sinew that stood seventeen inches high. You would see a small brown dog; I saw perfection."

So begins the story of Kate Jennings's unexpected love affair with two border terriers, first Stanley, then, a few years later, Sophie. A fiercely intelligent writer, an astute observer of people and her surroundings, a recent widow not ready to face her grief, an irascible Australian with no time for indulgent New Yorkers and their pampered pets, Jennings falls hard. She is swept off her feet, stunned by the depth of her love. Her life is suddenly overtaken by Stanley and, when she is seduced into getting him a companion, by the pair of them.

But after several years with her willful yet cherished dogs, Jennings came to the heartrending realization that they needed more than she could give -- and that she must reassess her own life, too. First and foremost, Stanley and Sophie is a book about dogs, understanding them, doing the best by them. It is also a vivid chronicle of Jennings's grief and sadness -- for the loss of a husband, for the city after September 11, for two pigtailed macaques in Bali, for a world going to hell in a handbasket. This is a bittersweet and darkly humorous memoir about the way two rivalrous, demanding, idiosyncratic, exhilarating dogs gave Jennings daily purpose and showed her the way to her own heart.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781416560388
Publisher: Scribner
Publication date: 08/05/2008
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 192
File size: 388 KB

About the Author

Kate Jennings, a poet, essayist, and novelist, grew up in the Australian Outback. She attended the University of Sydney in the late 1960s, where she gained notoriety as a feminist activist. She moved to New York City in 1979. Her novel Snake was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year, as was Moral Hazard, which was based on her experiences as a Wall Street speech-writer. Her work has been in contention for the Booker, IMPAC, and Los Angeles Times literary prizes. In her native country, she has won the prestigious Christina Stead and Adelaide Festival prizes and was honored with the Australian Literature Society Gold Medal.

Read an Excerpt


1.

A Cappella

Joe Cocker, the rock star, was underestimated, even in his heyday. He had the voice of an angel and the appearance of a mental hospital patient. His signature song, unless you count "She Came in Through the Bathroom Window," was the antiphonal Lennon-McCartney tune "With a Little Help from My Friends," which Cocker made his own by using waltz time and incorporating chorics with raw rock, much as the Rolling Stones did in "You Can't Always Get What You Want." My favorite part: Cocker's girl group carols, "Do you need anybody?" and Cocker confesses with distinctly manly candor, "I need someone to love." Then the girls ask, a cappella, "Would you believe in a love at first sight?" and he answers, "I'm certain that it happens all the time." I always shake my head at this. Doubtful. Very doubtful.

I've been insanely, destructively in love several times in my life, the details of which I'd rather not remember. (Neither adverb is an exaggeration; such was my derangement that certain people still walk out of a room when I walk into it. My excuse: I was young; it was the sixties; derangement, courtesy of R. D. Laing, had cachet.) And I was married for many years to a man for whom, I always said, I would walk a crooked mile. But love at first sight? No. The only time I've fallen in love at first sight was with dogs.

The first was Stanley, an aristocratic alpha male border terrier. Best of breed, pure princeling. (Kennel name: Bramblebee Borage, out of Wizard Notice of Bramblebee and Faithful One of Bramblebee.) The second was Sophie, a streetwise, scrappy, orphaned alpha female, also a border terrier, not to be confused with a border collie, an altogether different kind of dog. In my love for these two dogs lies a tale about human need, the kind that blots out all sense -- in this case, the sense of having two rivalrous terriers with more volatility and energy than the ocean in a New York City apartment. Human need -- immense subject.

And because Stanley came into my life in 2001 and Sophie in 2004, it's a tale, tangentially, about Manhattan in those first confounding, politically charged years of the new millennium. Years when our lives were a rhubarb of noisy emotion: a devil's chorus of fear, blatting rage, birring anxiety, tweedling incredulity, roupy sorrow.

Copyright © 2008 by Kate Jennings

Reading Group Guide


This reading group guide for Stanley and Sophie includes an introduction, discussion questions, and ideas for enhancing your book club. The suggested questions are intended to help your reading group find new and interesting angles and topics for your discussion. We hope that these ideas will enrich your conversation and increase your enjoyment of the book.

Introduction

"I fell in love with a prideful, tense bundle of muscle and sinew that stood seventeen inches high. You would see a small brown dog; I saw perfection."

So begins the story of Kate Jennings' unexpected love affair with two Border Terriers, first Stanley, then a few years later, Sophie. A fiercely intelligent writer, an astute observer of people and her surroundings, a recent widow now ready to face her grief, an irascible Australian with no time for indulgent New Yorkers and their pampered pets, Jennings falls hard. She is swept off her feet, stunned by the depth of her love. Her life is suddenly overtaken by Stanley, and, when she is seduced into getting a companion for him, by the pair of them.

But after several years with her willful yet cherished dogs, Jennings came to the heartrending realization that they needed more than she could give - and that she must reassess her own life, too. First and foremost, Stanley and Sophie is a book about dogs, understanding them and doing the best by them. It is also a vivid chronicle of Jennings' grief and sadness - for the loss of a husband, for the city after September 11, for two pigtailed macaques in Bali, for a world going to hell in a handbasket. This is a bittersweet and darkly humorous memoir about the way two demanding, idiosyncratic, exhilarating dogs gave Jennings daily purpose and showed her the way to her own heart.

Discussion Questions

1. In Stanley and Sophie, Kate Jennings describes having fallen in love at first sight only twice in her life - both times with dogs. What is it about dogs that allows for this kind of infatuation and emotional immediacy? How does the author's love for Stanley and Sophie relate to her own heightened sense of need? How is her love story entwined with her feelings about the city of Manhattan, and to what extent might those feelings also be described in terms of love?

2. "Who can stay sad around a creature so evidently bent on discovery, so palpably pleased to be in this world?" What is it about Stanley's personality that enables the author to transcend her own sadness and sense of loss? What do Stanley's special qualities as a Border Terrier have to do with the author's total immersion in his world? To what extent does her absorption with Stanley seem akin to a love affair?

3. What does the author's research into the history and temperament of the Border Terrier breed reveal about her own interest in Stanley's exemplifying the "best of the breed"? Why did she gravitate toward the terrier breed in the first place? How would you characterize Border Terriers, based on the author's detailed descriptions?

4. "New York City is a moody city, transmitting emotions as if it were an organic being." How does the author's perspective on life in New York City change in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks? What role does Stanley play in her ability to process the tragedy? To what extent might a non-native be able to interpret New York and its moods with greater objectivity than a native New Yorker?

5. "How on earth did this happen? How did it come about that I was spending my days adjudicating between two dogs who were acting out the story of my life?" What compels the author to adopt a second Border Terrier? How do Stanley and Sophie's responses to each other reveal their individual natures? Why does the author feel her dogs are repeating her own life in their canine dramas?

6. How does her identity as a dog owner come to shape the author? How does her role as parent to Stanley and Sophie transform her life in New York? To what extent does owning dogs enable the author to make deeper friendships and connections with people? How does her own attitude toward dogs change once she adopts Stanley?

7. "I inched toward a resolution that would have been inconceivable even a month before: to dismantle my life, to change it radically, beginning with Stanley and Sophie." What prompts the author to consider giving away her dogs to new families? Were you surprised by this decision? What might giving the dogs away represent for the author?

8. How do the author's experiences in Indonesia heighten her appreciation of the economic, environmental and social challenges faced by that country? In what respects does her attachment to the resident macaques at Puri Angsa, Chico and Cheeky, seem like an extension of her love for Stanley and Sophie? What ironies do you see in her returning to New York to escape from the terrorism in Bali?

9. "What Stanley recollects, what goes on in his noggin, who knows? But recollect he undoubtedly does, with an accuracy that can be astounding." How does the author's depiction of Stanley and Sophie offer a glimpse into the interior world of the Border Terrier? What aspects of her dogs' personalities does the author seem to have an especially keen and instinctive understanding of? To what extent are these dogs like human beings? Of the many anecdotes of Stanley and Sophie described in this memoir, which were most memorable to you and why?

Enhance Your Book Club

1. As Border Terriers - dogs renowned for their athleticism, independence, and sociability - Stanley and Sophie embody the best of their breed. Do you currently own a Border Terrier, or could you be interested in adopting one? You may want to visit the Border Terrier Club of America's extremely thorough website: btcoa.org/. There, you can find extensive information about Border Terrier current events, clubs in your region, a photo gallery, and relevant publications regarding Border Terriers as a breed. Might there be a Stanley or Sophie in your future?

2. Kate Jennings' deep love for Stanley and Sophie enables her to come to terms with her grief in both the aftermath of her husband's death and the 9/11 tragedy that befalls her adopted city. Have you ever found yourself depending on a cherished pet or a loved one to help you cope with a difficult time in your life? Think of some of the challenges you've faced, and recall who came to your aid. If you've been fortunate enough never to have experienced a troubled period in your life, who would you depend on in a time of need? How might a loved pet help?

3. Would you ever consider visiting Indonesia, the country Kate Jennings visits in Stanley and Sophie? Whether you're just intrigued by this amazing archipelago of some 17,000 islands or you're planning an actual trip, you will want to visit the CIA's comprehensive dossier on the country at cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/id.html. Here you can read about Indonesia's people, its government, its economy and some of the transnational issues that it faces.

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