When her husband dumps her for an old girlfriend and sets all of Peachland, South Carolina, gossiping, Janey Daniels has to get away-far away-for a "sabbatical" year. She flees to Burlington, Vermont, home of her Great Aunt May, her mother's only living relative. There she adopts Beulah, a Labrador puppy in training to become a Companion Dog for the Blind. Not for a moment does Janey suspect that this "year of the dog" will change her life forever. Shelby Hearon is an acknowledged master at illuminating the nuances of relationships. In Year of the Dog, she explores the surprising ways that the heart heals after a betrayal. While Janey is training Beulah, Beulah leads Janey to a new love, James Maarten, a smart, "fidgety" teacher they meet at the dog park. As Janey soon discovers, James has suffered a betrayal of his own that makes it hard for him to open up and trust her with even the smallest details of his past. While Janey tries to help James, she also reaches out to her enigmatic Aunt May, a retired librarian reputed to be the friend, perhaps even the lover, of popular mystery writer Bert Greenwood. When Janey attempts to solve the twin mysteries of why her great aunt has distanced herself from the family--and what her true relationship is with Bert Greenwood--Beulah provides the clues that lead Janey to uncover the secrets of her aunt's life. By the time Janey's year in Vermont comes to an end, the people whose lives Beulah has linked will discover that healing and reconciliation can come in the most unexpected ways.
At first I was not sure I was going to love this, but I am now so invested in this book that I don't want it to end. Further, I just wept my way through Chapter 36 with my stomach in knots. Buy this book. You will love it.
Excellent
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Thoroughly enjoyed the book. Great look at Vermont from an "outsider's" view. Being a Vermonter myself I found this particularly interesting. Not the usual "dog story" but well interwoven with people, places, and interesting events.
Wonderful Read
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
I've never read Hearon before, but am delighted to find a new-to-me author! I thoroughly loved this book, and even cried at the end. Happy tears. Though at times I did skim because I wasn't interested in some of the detail. I would've like a little more tension in the story, but you know, sometimes life isn't high tension, is it? Hearon is a wonderful story teller and the plot line with the dog gripped me completely.
Lovely and sweet
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
A simple, short, and lovely read. The author dealt with painful subjects and yet did it without pathos. Though Janey has suffered a lot of indignity and pain, she does not indulge in great flights of self pity and chooses, instead, to build a new life for herself. She shows a great deal of strength and growth over the course of the novel and though she's level-headed and calm in the face of some pretty major emotional events, I didn't feel that she was unbelievable as a character. Hearon also dealt sensitively with the issue of Aunt May and her relationship and did a good job of making James something of an immature and sometimes exasperating but still lovable character. There was an overall feeling of serenity to this novel due to Hearon's treating her characters' various tragedies as hardships but not tragedies of epic proportions. This lent the book a very realistic feel and really rang true. Overall I felt this book was a lovely celebration of the ordinariness of life, of its trials and tribulations and triumphs, and of the way we must pick ourselves up, brush ourselves off and carry on.
Poignant, human, appealing
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
One of the wonderful aspects of this wonderful novel is that it is both a human-human love story and a human-dog love story. Let's start with the heroine--Janey--who is competent, loving, funny, and believable. Then there is James, shy and wounded, whom I fell in love with even before she did. The author's description of their growing relationship is delicate and charming and dear. Janey's parents are as terrible--then comprehensible--as Hearon meant them to be. Aunt May is brilliant, one of the most appealing fictional women I have met in ages. But, in fact, all the supporting characters are wonderful--even the thugs who live upstairs from Janey. Finally, there is the dog, whose name is Beulah. Every description of Beulah is so perfect--every movement, every gesture, every look--that I was glowing with pride for her progress and dreading the moment when the year of training might end. I profoundly admire Hearon's skill, grace, humanity, and humor. I unequivocally recommend this novel, which is seamless, engrossing, suspenseful, intelligent, and loving.
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