Marley & me : life and love with the world's worst dog / John Grogan.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780060817084
- ISBN: 0060817089
- Physical Description: xi, 291 p. : ill ; 22 cm.
- Edition: 1st ed.
- Publisher: New York : Morrow, c2005.
Content descriptions
Target Audience Note: | All Ages. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Grogan, John, 1957- Labrador retriever > Florida > Biography. Human-animal relationships > Florida. Dog owners > Florida > Biography. |
Available copies
- 16 of 20 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
- 0 of 1 copy available at Nakusp Public Library.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 20 total copies.
Other Formats and Editions
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Holdable? | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nakusp Public Library | 636.75 GRO (Text) | 35160000836909 | Adult Non-fiction | Volume hold | Checked out | 2025-03-27 |
More information
- Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2005 October #1
"Oh my. I don't think I've ever seen anything so cute in my life." Thus author Grogan's wife sealed their fate when they "just went to look" at a litter of Labrador retriever puppies and ended up picking out Marley. Maybe their first clue should have been that the breeder had discounted the price on their puppy, or when they saw his father charging out of the woods covered in mud with a crazed but joyous look in his eye. Despite these portents, Marley entered their lives, and nothing was ever the same again. Between careening through screen doors and swallowing everything that would fit in his mouth, Marley also managed to comfort these two when they miscarried their first child. Although Marley got kicked out of obedience training after he dragged the instructor across the parking lot and terrorized his pet sitter, he also landed a minor role in a straight-to-video movie. Marley, incorrigible though he was, had inserted himself into the author's life in a way no normal dog could. A warm, friendly -memoir-with-dog. ((Reviewed October 1, 2005)) Copyright 2005 Booklist Reviews. - BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2005 December
It's a dog's lifeWhen Philadelphia Inquirer columnist John Grogan wrote about the death of his family's dog, he was amazed at the response from his readers and was inspired to write Marley & Me: Life and Love with the World's Worst Dog.
Marley was a yellow Labrador retriever adopted by the Grogans when they were newlyweds who had unrealistic notions about dogs and life.
A frantic bundle of uncontrollable energy, the puppy was kicked out of obedience school.
"Marley was a chewer of couches, a slasher of screens, a slinger of drool, a tipper of trash cans," Grogan writes. He grew so big he could eat off the table with all four paws on the floor. But Marley had the heart of a champion. He was gentle and loving with children and instinctively knew when someone needed protection or a comforting cuddle. Grogan's touching account shows how Marley taught his family valuable life lessons and gave the gift that keeps on giving?unconditional love. Copyright 2005 BookPage Reviews.
- BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2006 March
When man's best friend is the world's worst dogThe memoir genre has taken a beating in recent months, with some writers accused of fudging facts or inventing events to make their life stories more salacious. But John Grogan, a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, didn't need to create the exploits in his blockbuster memoir, Marley & Me: the inspiration for the book, his yellow Labrador retriever Marley, got into enough verifiable mischief and mayhem to fill a few manuscripts without straining a paw.
"I'm a working journalist, so when you say nonfiction, it's got to be true," Grogan says. "I want to be honest and write from my heart because when you start hedging your bets, that's when people can tell you're not being totally candid."
Readers and animal lovers, never fearâthe book, subtitled "Life and Love with the World's Worst Dog," candidly details the early adventures of Jenny and John Grogan, mild-mannered, starry-eyed newlyweds who thought that raising a dog would be good practice for raising children.
Cut to their purchase of a rambunctious, attention-deficit-disordered puppy who grew into a big boisterous lug that crashed through his days, leaving wrecked screen doors, shattered nerves, angry obedience instructors, muddied clothing and a long trail of slobber behind him.
"We were adults by age but we weren't grown up yet," Grogan says. "Our patience had never been tested. Suddenly we're the responsible ones and he was the incorrigible one."
Grogan's chronicle of their attempts to curb their beloved beast has body-slammed the bestseller lists (Marley would be proud) and was named a best book of 2005 by the New York Times (which Marley would have eaten). Since its publication last fall, the book has made 17 trips back to press for 720,000 copies in print.
While Grogan didn't make "a conscious decision that this was going to be a book that talks about our relationship every bit as much as it talks about the dog," his memoir documents a marriage and family weathering a miscarriage, children, post-partum depression, new towns and new jobs, while living with a dog that consistently provokes laughter and frustration and teaches them to be themselves even when that irks everyone else. "A family is a unit and you accept the members of that family as they are . . . but you don't give up on them," Grogan says.
The touching story has struck a huge chord with both women and "your stereotypical big, tough men," according to Grogan, who has received more than 2,000 e-mails from readers to date not only praising and reacting to the book, but sharing their own "bad dog" stories. "Part of having a challenging dog is that you have to invest more of yourself emotionally to make the relationship work," Grogan says. "There's a tighter bond between owners and their bad dogs."
Grogan eventually had to open an online bulletin board and his publisher is sending him out on a "book tour reprise" this spring, since readers can't seem to get enough of Marley. "This was a book from the heart," Grogan says, "a book I felt I needed to write."
While the family now includes three children and another lab, Gracie ("everything Marley wasn't," according to Grogan), the book is a testament to the important role one dog played in a family, teaching them about unconditional love, commitment and acceptance.
"Marley brought qualities into the relationship that helped us grow and learn and become the couple and the parents that we ended up being," Grogan says, "which I would argue is better than what we would have been otherwise." Copyright 2006 BookPage Reviews.
- Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2005 September #1
Maudlin, embarrassing ode to a pooch.The author and his wife still qualified as newlyweds-they'd been married just over a year-when they decided to adopt a dog. Jenny, who had recently killed a houseplant (a "lovely large dieffenbachia with emerald-and-cream variegated leaves"), thought she needed to brush up on her maternal skills before she tried to have a baby. Hence Marley, a lovable Labrador retriever. John adores the reggae tempo of Marley's tail-wagging and enjoys playing tug-of-war with him. Within a few weeks, the Grogans felt confident about their caretaking ability and tossed their birth control in the trash. Jenny got pregnant, but miscarried; she embraced not only John but also Marley in her grief. And on it went: Marley got kicked out of obedience class. He developed a fear of thunder, which the Grogans discussed seriously with a vet. When the Grogans went on a trip, they left a six-page memo about Marley's care with the colleague who agreed to dog-sit. (Blessedly, the author only reproduces three-and-a-half of those pages here.) Marley appeared in a movie, The Last Home Run. Jenny got pregnant again-maybe it was because Marley sometimes lolled around in bed with the Grogans during their basal-temperature-ovulation-calendar-we-must-have-sex-right-this-second drill-sessions-and ultimately carried two pregnancies to term. But it feels as if Grogan has mistaken Marley for his first baby. He's like those people who prattle on about every single blessed thing their kids do-except in this case, it's a dog.Marley died at age 13, and the book ends with the Grogans thinking of adopting another puppy. Please, no sequels! Only the most alarmingly devoted dog lovers should bother with this one. Copyright Kirkus 2005 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved. - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2005 July #1
Grogan, a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer and former editor of Organic Gardening magazine, offers a humorous and loving tribute to Marley (after Bob Marley), his late 100-pound yellow Labrador. The story begins in south Florida when Grogan and his wife, Jenny, decide to adopt a puppy and begin their search. Marley quickly grows and starts to do things that Grogan interprets as typical puppy behavior-chewing shoes, tearing curtains, and jumping up on people. But after several months, Marley's behavior turns more destructive-during thunderstorms, for example, he chews up pieces of walls and damages doors. Grogan recounts various efforts to correct Marley's behavior over a period of years, interweaving them with events in his wife's and children's lives. Throughout, the family is steadfastly devoted to this badly behaved yet totally lovable and loyal pup. Grogan includes the column from the Philadelphia Inquirer, written after Marley's death, that elicited many reader responses and spurred him to write Marley's life story. Readers in public libraries whose dogs would qualify for the "Bad Dog Club" will delight in this tribute; recommended.-Eva Lautemann, Georgia Perimeter Coll. Lib., Clarkston Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2005 August #1
Labrador retrievers are generally considered even-tempered, calm and reliable-and then there's Marley, the subject of this delightful tribute to one Lab who doesn't fit the mold. Grogan, a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, and his wife, Jenny, were newly married and living in West Palm Beach when they decided that owning a dog would give them a foretaste of the parenthood they anticipated. Marley was a sweet, affectionate puppy who grew into a lovably naughty, hyperactive dog. With a light touch, the author details how Marley was kicked out of obedience school after humiliating his instructor (whom Grogan calls Miss Dominatrix) and swallowed an 18-karat solid gold necklace (Grogan describes his gross but hilarious "recovery operation"). With the arrival of children in the family, Marley became so incorrigible that Jenny, stressed out by a new baby, ordered her husband to get rid of him; she eventually recovered her equilibrium and relented. Grogan's chronicle of the adventures parents and children (eventually three) enjoyed with the overly energetic but endearing dog is delivered with great humor. Dog lovers will love this account of Grogan's much loved canine. Agent, Laurie Abkemeier. (On sale Oct. 25) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.