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Walking Ollie: Or, Winning the Love of a Difficult Dog

von Stephen Foster

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1198230,402 (3.25)3
The Sunday Times bestseller Will appeal to the Marley & Me market Entertaining short story, brilliantly narrated by Nicholas Bell. You lose your marbles when you've got a dog; that's what happens... One winter's afternoon, Stephen Foster walks into a dog re-homing centre with the intention of picking up a retired greyhound. Instead, he acquires an abandoned lurcher pup. Foster's knowledge of dogs is so vague that he has to look up 'lurcher' in key reference work The Giant Book of the Dog, to find out what sort of animal is coming to join the family. His research counts for little: the new arrival does not conform to any known breed standard, or indeed any standard whatsoever that might be considered dog-normal. Walking Ollie is for anyone who has ever loved a dog - a touching, and often hysterically funny, account of one man's attempt to turn a decidedly difficult animal into something resembling a domestic pet. "Ollie is trouble. But he is also a joy. So is reading about him." - The Guardian 5-star reviews on amazon.com and amazon.co.uk… (mehr)
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This is a lovely memoir. The author, Stephen Foster, a sports writer, is greatly challenged by Ollie. (The dog formerly known as Ernie.) The puppy in question is a rescued lurcher. A lurcher is a dog that is half greyhound and half something else. In Ollie’s case his non-greyhound half is saluki, also a sight hound. The lurcher breed was developed in Britain due to the fact that only the nobility were permitted to own greyhounds. Lurchers were and probably still are the poacher’s breed of choice. Ollie is adopted from the animal-welfare home at Snetterton in Norfolk.

Ollie proves to be a nervous pup who seemed to spend a great deal of time running around and looking worried. Walking him proves to be a major challenge as he wants only (naturally enough) to play with other dogs, to chase and be chased. And as is typical of his breed and sight hounds in general he does not come when he is called, very poor recall. The author calculates the time he spends walking Ollie, chasing Ollie, at about five hours a day. He had imagined that dog walking would be a contemplative activity that would allow him to think about his writing. Instead he must endure the scorn of other dog walkers (mostly Lab owners) who proclaim Ollie “out of control”.

The harrowing walks with Ollie are only half the problem; the dog is terrified of him. He cringes and runs from the room at the sight of his owner. He will not accept affection from him but he will take food bribes. A scene is described in which Ollie is finally apprehended after one of his “walks” because the other has laid a trail of cheese cubes. Out of control barely covers it. There is a heart stopping chase down a motorway at night which both dog and owner miraculously survive. But there is a break through that follows Ollie running amok in the midst of a fishing competition (you can imagine) that marks a turning point for both of them. Ollie actually begins to listen to his owner. “Patience is the only technique I can pass on, if you can call patience a technique-so far as rescue animal husbandry is concerned, I feel pretty certain that you can. Patience is an aspect of love. We started to love each other.”

Of course the road was not smooth nor the course straight. There were more struggles ahead but I won’t spoil the book by telling all. It is, as I said at the outset, a lovely memoir. Humorous, touching, and very frank this book is a testament of the dedication that one individual can have to one dog. ( )
  AlexisLovesBooks | Feb 9, 2016 |
Dumb, loveable dog, stupid dog owner, boring book! Don't bother with it - there are too many good stories out there waiting to be read. ( )
  HeatherLINC | Jan 23, 2016 |
It kept me reading. Good story about an owner and his pet. ( )
  catgirl211 | Jul 20, 2009 |
The British Marley. I didn't find this book as enchanting as Marley and Me, but that may have been partially because of the cultural divide between American and English dog owners (prior to reading this book I didn't realize there was one). Author Foster goes on and on about the importance of letting dogs off leash to play with other dogs and to run free, and then his frustration as he spends hours trying to catch the dog. Hours. Every time they walk. At least where I live, it's not legal to have your dog off leash unless you are on your own property or at a dog park, and the nearest dog park is a 2 hour round trip. Which might not matter to Foster, with the amount of time he's out with Ollie - luckily he writes from home, and it doesn't seem to bother him that he's not actually doing much work (at one point he admits to spending most of his daylight hours walking Ollie). So there might be a financial divide too. Still, the book did have some amusing parts, and Ollie does have his charm, particularly in his love of running and all other dogs, and readers will root for Ollie to come out of his shell. ( )
  dcoward | Jul 21, 2008 |
A beautiful story about a rescued puppy with a few little problems. Heartwarming and funny all the way through, not to mention that Ollie is absolutely beautiful. ( )
  LadyBlossom | Oct 28, 2007 |
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The Sunday Times bestseller Will appeal to the Marley & Me market Entertaining short story, brilliantly narrated by Nicholas Bell. You lose your marbles when you've got a dog; that's what happens... One winter's afternoon, Stephen Foster walks into a dog re-homing centre with the intention of picking up a retired greyhound. Instead, he acquires an abandoned lurcher pup. Foster's knowledge of dogs is so vague that he has to look up 'lurcher' in key reference work The Giant Book of the Dog, to find out what sort of animal is coming to join the family. His research counts for little: the new arrival does not conform to any known breed standard, or indeed any standard whatsoever that might be considered dog-normal. Walking Ollie is for anyone who has ever loved a dog - a touching, and often hysterically funny, account of one man's attempt to turn a decidedly difficult animal into something resembling a domestic pet. "Ollie is trouble. But he is also a joy. So is reading about him." - The Guardian 5-star reviews on amazon.com and amazon.co.uk

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