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   Book Info

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Gone to the Dogs  
Author: Emily Carmichael
ISBN: 0553586335
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
Piggy, the corpulent Corgi that starred in Carmichael's two previous romantic capers (Diamond in the Ruff; Finding Mr. Right), is back, and she'll have readers wagging their tails in delight before this playful romance is over. In her previous life, Piggy was Lydia Keane, a leggy blonde whose less-than-perfect life warranted reincarnation as a squat little dog. Suffering through a diet imposed by her new owner, do-gooder Nell Jordan, Piggy searches relentlessly for crumbs and shares the task of narrating, the juxtaposition of her human thoughts and doggy desires providing endless entertainment. But when Piggy inherits a fortune from an old man she visited as a therapy dog, she must forgo chew toys and focus on protecting her starry-eyed owner from hunky P.I. Dan Travis, who happens to be the grandson of Piggy's benefactor. At the request of his aggrieved mother, Dan finds himself investigating Nell and, unexpectedly, falling for her. But Nell has a secret that threatens to tear the couple apart. A villain intent on kidnapping Piggy adds some suspense, but it is Carmichael's scenic descriptions of the northern Arizona setting, insider's peek into the world of therapy pets and loveable characters, both human and otherwise, that make this lighthearted romp worth savoring. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Piggy--the slightly corpulent corgi first introduced in Finding Mr. Right (1998), then reappearing in Diamond in the Ruff (2001)--is back and rolling in greenbacks. Sent to Arizona by her previous owners, Piggy is now with practical and modest Nell, a member of a pet therapy group. After one of the patients dies and leaves his substantial estate to Piggy, she's ecstatic because, in actuality, Piggy is a former semi-amoral, wild young woman who, upon her death, is sentenced to spend some time in the form of a chubby dog. But Nell is reluctant to spend the money. When their old VW runs off the road, they are helped by Dan Travis, a former L.A. cop, and Nell and Dan hit it off big time. But Piggy suspects that Dan is after her money and does everything in her doggie powers to get rid of him. And both Dan and Nell harbor secrets that could sever their budding relationship and endanger Piggy's life. Carmichael's spunky canine heroine will win even more admirers in this terrifically funny and captivating installment in her ongoing adventures. Maria Hatton
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"It is Carmichael’s scenic descriptions of the northern Arizona setting, insider’s peek into the world of therapy pets and loveable characters, both human and otherwise, that make this lighthearted romp worth savoring."
--Publishers Weekly

Review
"It is Carmichael?s scenic descriptions of the northern Arizona setting, insider?s peek into the world of therapy pets and loveable characters, both human and otherwise, that make this lighthearted romp worth savoring."
--Publishers Weekly

From the Inside Flap
Miss Piggy, everyone's favorite vamp-turned-mutt, is back for another matchmaking adventure! Shipped off to Arizona to work as a pet therapy dog, Piggy now lives with Nell Jordan, a freelance journalist living a hand-to-mouth existence writing human interest stories and volunteering for her pet therapy group, "Hearts of Gold." When one of the most curmudgeonly patients on their visiting route dies, Nell is shocked to learn that he's left $12 million...to Piggy! Miss Piggy's all-too-human-spirit is thrilled by her nouveau riche status, but foiled by her doggy exterior—and by the presence of Dan Travis, Nell's new boyfriend. Piggy's convinced that Dan's only after Nell's—er, Piggy's—money, and is determined to break them up. But Dan has secrets bigger than that, and as he falls harder and harder for Nell, they threaten to blow up in his face.

From the Back Cover
"It is Carmichael’s scenic descriptions of the northern Arizona setting, insider’s peek into the world of therapy pets and loveable characters, both human and otherwise, that make this lighthearted romp worth savoring."
--Publishers Weekly

About the Author
Emily Carmichael is the award-winning author of over twenty novels and novellas, both historical and contemporary. She lives in Arizona with her husband and a houseful of dogs, and is currently at work on the next “Hearts of Gold” novel.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
chapter 1



NELL JORDAN was used to people bursting into tears when they saw her, but this particular woman rivaled the floodgates at Hoover Dam. But of course, the woman's overflowing eyes fastened not on Nell in her clean white tennies, Wal-Mart khakis, and green polo shirt, but on Piggy in her freshly brushed reddish-brown fur, pointy ears, liquid-brown eyes, and the green doggie vest that announced she was a registered therapy dog.

An older gent across the room from the weeper nudged his wife. "Look, Ethel! It's a dog! Right here in the surgery waiting room! Don't that beat all?"

"My word! Isn't he cute?" Ethel made a clucking noise to get Piggy's attention, and others seated in the uncomfortable waiting room chairs also made bids to be noticed, but Piggy focused on the woman sitting in the corner--the one suffering the waterworks.

A younger version of the distraught woman--a daughter, Nell speculated--tried to comfort her. "Mom, it's okay."

But Piggy knew better what the woman needed. The corgi paddled forward on abbreviated legs, stuck a wet nose beneath the woman's hand, and settled firmly against her leg.

Soft comments from a rapt audience:

"Oh, isn't that just darling!"

"Don't that beat all!"

"What a good dog!"

"What'd they do, cut her legs off at the knee?"

Everyone in the room had the courtesy to stare at the dog, not at the woman making such an emotional scene. People waiting for a loved one in surgery or waiting for their own turn under the knife knew about tears, and they didn't begrudge the distressed woman her release.

"Her name is Piggy," Nell said.

"Piggy," the tearful one quavered, and didn't take her eyes from the dog. Piggy sighed in contentment as the woman found just the right spot behind one of her big ears. "You're a wonderful little dog, Piggy." The tears eased a bit as she dabbed at her face with a handkerchief. "A wonderful dog. I just . . . just, well, you know, there's something about a dog." She sighed and bit her lip, then said in a quiet, broken voice, "Since my mother's accident two days ago I haven't been able to cry. It stayed inside me and just burned and hurt, you know? But I couldn't cry. Until I saw the dog. There's just something about a dog." She shook her head. "And now I can't stop crying. But it almost feels good. I'm sorry to be such a blubberer."

"Not a problem." Nell gave her a warm smile. "It doesn't bother Piggy a bit."

The daughter gave her mother's hand a comforting squeeze. "Gran's going to be just fine, Mom. I know she is." Then she smiled up at Nell. "Is she a guide dog or something?"

"Piggy's a therapy dog who visits here at the hospital."

"Do you take her into patient rooms?" someone across the waiting room asked.

"We go everywhere but obstetrics." Nell smiled. "They don't need our help in there."

That earned a laugh.

"Show them your trick, Piggy." Nell waggled an index finger at the dog.

Piggy gave Nell a disgusted look, but she lifted her stubby front leg in the semblance of a wave. The trick earned her a round of applause and a few chortles, then another ovation when she caught the tiny treat that Nell tossed her way.

"She's a mercenary little soul," Nell explained. "Works for food."

"Don't we all?" said a youngish man in worn cowboy boots and a battered Stetson.

Everyone wanted Piggy's attention, reaching out to touch her and tell her what an extraordinary dog she was. Piggy took the attention with queenly condescension while occasionally darting beneath a chair to grab a cracker crumb or peanut that the housekeeping staff had missed. People in the waiting room often munched on vending machine food, and sometimes they weren't too neat about it. The occasional leavings made the surgery waiting room Piggy's favorite stop in the hospital. Nell had supposedly trained her not to take anything off the floor during their visits, but Piggy had become expert at darting after crumbs when Nell wasn't watching.

"She's a hungry little dude," the guy in the Stetson commented.

"You're right, but she's supposed to be on a diet."

"You mean, she's not supposed to look like a basketball with legs?"

Piggy halted her crumb search long enough to glare at him, but the opening of a door distracted her. From the inner surgery sanctum a nurse wheeled out a teenage girl with a huge bandage on her arm. "Hi there, Piggy," the nurse said in a cheery voice.

Nearly all the staff knew Piggy's name. Few knew Nell's. But that was fine with Nell. Piggy did most of the work during their visits, anyway.

"Hey, dog!" The teenager dropped her good arm beside the chair and wriggled her fingers. Piggy condescended to let her scratch an ear. "I didn't know they let dogs in the hospital."

The nurse laughed. "Only because Piggy's a very special dog. And there's a few other special creatures we let visit."

"Like Dr. Tolliver?"

"Don't let Dr. Tolliver hear you call him a creature." The girl's mother had gathered up the afghan she'd been knitting and joined them. "Not after he fixed you up like new." She gave the nurse an anxious look.

"Good as new," the nurse confirmed. "The doctor will talk to you while I wheel Tiffany out to the entrance. I'll stay with her until you bring up your car."

"Wait!" Tiffany objected as the nurse pushed the wheelchair toward the door. "I have to say 'bye to . . . what's the dog's name?"

"Piggy," Nell supplied.

"Piggy! Oh, man! She looks like one, too. 'Bye, Piggy! 'Bye, Piggy!"

Piggy huffed out an indignant snort as the waiting room door closed behind the girl.

"She's sensitive about her figure," Nell explained with a grin.

Most of the waiting room chuckled, including the woman who had wept so on Piggy's entrance.

"Never seen such a thing," one man observed with a snort. "Next thing you know, they'll be bringing in a whole petting zoo."



OKAY. THIS requires a bit of clarification. Me, Piggy, a therapy dog. I can almost hear you laughing. Just don't get carried away with that snorting and snickering, people, because it's not that funny. I'll admit I'm hardly the type to bring comfort to the sick and distressed. I'm a heartbreaker, not a heart-warmer. At least, Lydia Keane was a heartbreaker, and proud of it. Piggy, on the other hand . . .

Well, let's just say I had trouble ignoring all those dog instincts that came with the fat furry body. Dogs genuinely like people. It's one of their greatest weaknesses. They're born chumps. A friendly word or a pat on the head sends their little canine hearts into somersaults of joy, and they're only too eager to repay the attention by cuddling, kissing, and generally making themselves look foolish.

Of course, as Lydia Keane I did a bit of cuddling and kissing in my time, but Lydia required more foreplay than a pat on the head.

But back to the point. The longer I stayed in the dog suit, the more I found my nature changing to incorporate Dog. Stanley no doubt thought the change was a positive one. He would. In the beginning, losing my sharp edge bothered me. Not to mention the total embarrassment of occasionally getting an urge to sniff dog butts or pounce on anything that resembles a ball. But by the time I arrived in Arizona, I had come to accept my fate with good grace, or what passed for good grace with me. Lydia Keane would have laughed at the idea of spreading a little comfort in a hospital, and the first sight of a bedpan would have sent her running. But Piggy found that bedpans have a certain allure--to the point that Nell had to work hard to keep my nose away from them. And bringing a smile to someone who needed a bit of cheer warmed the doggy part of my heart.

I don't want you to think I had turned into some kind of lame Pollyanna, though. I may have lost some of my edge, but not my smarts. Prancing around the hospital as a therapy dog had certain rewards, especially for a dog on a diet. For instance, in the surgery waiting room is a table generally piled high with Danish rolls. Not that Nell would ever let me grab one (I tried once when I thought she wasn't paying attention. Turns out she was paying attention.) But the people in the waiting room munch on the Danishes and drop crumbs on the chairs and floor. Very enticing. My short little legs place my nose close enough to the carpet that grabbing a crumb or two takes only half a second. The crumbs are in my stomach and I'm looking as innocent as a newborn puppy by the time Nell notices I've even moved.

And the surgery waiting room isn't the only area where an alert corgi can earn a bonus. Patients are always trying to coddle me with crackers from their lunch or maybe a Jell-O cup. (I especially like raspberry.) Nell asks them not to feed me--she can be a real killjoy--but some of the patients are sneaky enough to rival a corgi. Occasionally a piece of breakfast roll finds its way beneath the bedcovers just an inch away from my nose, or a Jell-O cup drifts within reach of my tongue when Nell's eyes are turned somewhere else. People commonly turn up their noses at hospital food, but a corgi doesn't turn a nose up at anything edible.

But, lest you think I don't work hard for these perks, let me clue you in that the hospital is not all fun and games for a therapy dog. We are sensitive creatures--yes, even me. A dog picks up on emotion much faster than a person. And a hospital has emotions ricocheting off the walls like balls in a squash court. Anxiety, love, sadness, grief, joy, boredom--they come at you from all directions. The dog part of me always wants to respond, but the part of me that is still Lydia tries to duck like a kid playing dodge ball. My internal battles get quite interesting, let me tell you. So don't think I didn't earn all those ear scratches, Danish crumbs, and Jell-O cups as I did my Florence Nightingale act. I hope Stanley took note of how hard I worked to bring such special attention to those in need.

For instance, take the day that I did my little tricks in the surgery waiting room (Nell thought they were funny; I found them totally embarrassing) and won the heart of that teenager in the wheelchair. That day I was called upon to rise above and beyond the usual role of a therapy dog, and the reward I got is pretty much what this whole story is about.

There I was in the surgery waiting room, innocently going about the business of being entertaining, when the nurse from CCU walks through the door. For those of you who aren't hospital professionals like me, CCU stands for Critical Care Unit. Yes, we dogs do visit there. Even though most of the patients have inconvenient tubes running from various body parts to beeping and blinking machines, they enjoy a friendly dog as much as anyone else.

As I was saying, though, in walked Stephanie Combs from CCU to give Nell an anxious look.

"I thought you two might be here this time of morning," she said. "Were you planning on coming over to CCU?"

"Our next stop," Nell told her.

"That's good. I wanted to be sure you stopped by, because we have a patient in there who really wants to see you."

"Oh?"

I was a little surprised myself. We had many fans in the hospital, but not often did they want a command performance.

"I'd make it real soon," Stephanie said, which sounded a bit ominous to me.

Nell took Stephanie at her word and waved a friendly so long to the people in the surgery waiting room. "Wave 'bye, Piggy."

Stupid dog tricks. Everyone was amused but me.

CCU was busy that morning. A couple of doctors in green scrubs sat at the nurses' station scribbling on charts. A team of three emergency medical techs in their snappy uniforms were talking to a patient being hooked into a heart monitor. (Yes, even as a dog, I still have an acute eye for fashion, and let me assure you, the EMTs have it all over the docs.) And every room was full. Stephanie escorted us into a room that was dim and stuffy. The drapes were pulled against the bright February sunshine, and the lights were off. Though the air-conditioning busily pumped in fresh air, the room smelled of things you don't want to hear about. Probably no one noticed it but me, but dog noses have a gift for detecting such things.

Stephanie greeted the man in the bed with her professionally cheery voice. "Mr. Cramer, look who's come to see you. It's Piggy."

Frank Cramer. What do you know? I'd barely recognized his scent through all the other odors. I was always glad to see Frank. He was a crotchety old devil, but he had class.

In a whispered aside to Nell, Stephanie explained: "He's in a bad way, and ordinarily we wouldn't allow any visitors but family, but he's been asking specifically to see Piggy and you."

Notice how she put my name first? As it should be.

"Piggy?"

The wispy voice from the bed didn't sound like Frank's usual bellow. But it was him, all right. When Nell lifted me up to the bed I recognized him right off, though he didn't look too good. Once I got settled beside him where I wouldn't step on any important tubes or body parts, I looked in his watery eyes and sensed he was very close to leaving, closer maybe than the medical people knew. I know things like that, because I've been there, done that, and won't soon forget the journey. Dying isn't a bad thing, really, but it's something you remember for a while.

"Piggy." He put his gnarled old hand on my head. "How the hell are you, old girl?"

I laid my head carefully on his chest as he made a feeble effort to pet me. Poor Frank. I'd been visiting him for the last six months in a swank nursing home. As I said, Frank was a crotchety old so-and-so, and I don't think family and friends, if he had any, paid him much mind. Probably because he complained about everything and anything, yelled at people just for the pleasure of yelling, tried to boss everyone around, and generally made himself unpleasant to anyone who ventured near.




Gone to the Dogs

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Gone to the DogsEmily Carmichael"It is Carmichael’s scenic descriptions of the northern Arizona setting, insider’s peek into the world of therapy pets and loveable characters, both human and otherwise, that make this lighthearted romp worth savoring."
--Publishers Weekly

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Piggy, the corpulent Corgi that starred in Carmichael's two previous romantic capers (Diamond in the Ruff; Finding Mr. Right), is back, and she'll have readers wagging their tails in delight before this playful romance is over. In her previous life, Piggy was Lydia Keane, a leggy blonde whose less-than-perfect life warranted reincarnation as a squat little dog. Suffering through a diet imposed by her new owner, do-gooder Nell Jordan, Piggy searches relentlessly for crumbs and shares the task of narrating, the juxtaposition of her human thoughts and doggy desires providing endless entertainment. But when Piggy inherits a fortune from an old man she visited as a therapy dog, she must forgo chew toys and focus on protecting her starry-eyed owner from hunky P.I. Dan Travis, who happens to be the grandson of Piggy's benefactor. At the request of his aggrieved mother, Dan finds himself investigating Nell and, unexpectedly, falling for her. But Nell has a secret that threatens to tear the couple apart. A villain intent on kidnapping Piggy adds some suspense, but it is Carmichael's scenic descriptions of the northern Arizona setting, insider's peek into the world of therapy pets and loveable characters, both human and otherwise, that make this lighthearted romp worth savoring. (Jan.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Carmichael's latest comedy continues the adventures of gorgeous but morally challenged Lydia Keane (Finding Mr. Right; Diamond in the Ruff), accidentally murdered and reincarnated as chubby Welsh corgi Piggy and sent back to Earth by the celestial powers on a matchmaking mission as atonement for her past life. Our reluctant heroine has now been brought into the spartan life of freelance writer Nell Jordan in northern Arizona, where Piggy-now a registered therapy dog-makes life a little brighter for people at the local medical centers. And then old Frank Cramer dies, leaving Piggy a $12 million trust! Instant local celebrity, greedy relatives, and a handsome but suspicious private investigator stir things up, and Piggy, whose job it is to make sure that Nell doesn't fall victim to fortune hunters, however cute, has her work cut out for her. Lively pacing, zingy dialog, and Piggy's hilarious internal monologs are just the things to lighten the winter blues for readers who like their contemporaries on the sassy, slightly paranormal side. Carmichael has written numerous historical and contemporary romances and lives in Arizona. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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