
The Doggie in the Window
How One Dog Led Me from the Pet Store to the Factory Farm to Uncover the Truth of Where Puppies Really Come From
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

February 15, 2018
When journalist Kress bought her wheaten terrier, Izzie, she made sure he came from a USDA-licensed breeder, not a puppy mill. But a license doesn't protect dogs from the kinds of horrors seen on late-night Humane Society infomercials. The USDA's standards are more in line with how livestock is treated than what we imagine our furry companions deserve, and enforcement is complicated and inadequate. Using Izzie's mysterious provenance as a guide, Kress digs into the (lack of) science behind the Animal Welfare Act and the realities of commercial dog breeding. Though far from objective (she is, after all, a dog lover), she illuminates gray areas: the disconnect between the public's view of the puppy (beloved pet) and that of the breeder (agricultural commodity); the rise of factory farming, which drove many family farms to dog breeding; and how rescue groups unwittingly line the pockets of their adversaries at puppy auctions. Mercifully, there are no photographs, and descriptions of canine suffering are limited. This important book is a call to arms for a complacent public dazzled by a sweet puppy face.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)
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