Saturday, February 19, 2011

Inside of a Dog

What Dogs See, Smell and Know

By Alexandra Horowitz

"These two components - perception and action - largely define and circumscribe the world for every living thing. All animals have their own umwelten - their own subjective realities, what von Uexkull thought of as 'soap bubbles' with them forever caught in the middle. We humans are enclosed in our own soap bubbles, too. In each of our self- worlds, for instance, we are very attentive to where other people are and what they are saying." Pg 21

"A rose is a rose is a rose. Or is it? To a human a rose is a certain kind of flower, a gift between lovers, and a thing of beauty. To the beetle, a rose is perhaps an entire territory, with places to hide (on the underside of a leaf, invisible to aerial predators), hunt  (in the head of the flower where ant nymphs grow), and lay eggs (in the joint of the leaf and stem). To the elephant, it is a thorn barely detectable underfoot." Pg 22

"Understanding a dog's perspective - through understanding his abilities, experience, and communication - provides that vocabulary. But we can't translate it simply through an introspection that brings our own umwelt along. Most of us are not excellent smellers; to imagine being a smeller, we have to do more than just think on it. That kind of introspective exercise only works when paired with an understanding of how profound the difference in umwelt is between us and another animal." Pg 23

"Here we begin to see how the dog and the human overlap in our worldviews, and how we differ. A good many objects in the world have an eating tone to the dog - probably many more than we see. Feces just aren't menu items for us; dogs disagree. Dogs may have tones that we don't have at all - rolling tones, say: things that one might merrily roll in. Unless we are particularly playful or young, our list of rolling-tone objects is small to nil. And plenty of ordinary objects that have very specific meaning to us - forks, knives, hammers, pushpins, fans, clocks, on and on - have little or no meaning to dogs. To a dog, a hammer doesn't exist. A dog doesn't act with or on a hammer, so it has no significance to a dog. At least, not unless it overlaps with some other, meaningful object: it is wielded by a loved person; it is urinated on by the cute dog down the street; its dense wooden handle can be chewed like a stick." Pg 25

I hope these tid bits whet your appetite for the amazing work this book provides uncovering life through the eyes of a dog.

http://insideofadog.com/

Book 11

Garlic and Sapphires

The Secret Life of a Critic in Disguise

By Ruth Reichi 

The way Reichi writes about her experience eating makes me feel like I have never tasted food before! Explore the most well known restaurants in New York City through the eyes of then New York Times food critic. Participate in her struggle to remain anonymous in order to experience the same food you or I would taste if we were to dine at that same restaurant.  

Sprinkled throughout Reichi shares some of her favorite recipes as well as her struggle to find the life/work balance raising a young child in New York City. Surprisingly, in the end, the reader ends up sharing a journey of self-definition and recreation.
Excellent read, I know my mother would love this book!
 
Book 11

February Flowers

By Fan Wu

A simple coming of age story of two Chinese girls in college who struggle with what womanhood, friendship and sexuality mean.  Woven throughout is the question of loss, regret and how our past shapes our present and our future.

Book 10

Sunday, February 6, 2011

OUT

By Natsuo Kirino

This story is essentially about four women who have a very surreal and gruesome experience which has a ripple effect through the group, spilling out into a community and then culminating in a truly riveting and surprise ending. It can generically be classified as a "mystery," but Kirino proceeds past that genre somewhere after the first quarter of the book into an explicable domain. Past the who dunnit. Past the sordid unearthed truths. Past the characters themselves. Culminating in an almost inexplicable, terrifying conclusion.

Note: Not for the feign of heart!

Book 9