Last Dog on the Hill: The Extraordinary Life of Lou
Last Dog on the Hill: The Extraordinary Life of Lou book cover

Last Dog on the Hill: The Extraordinary Life of Lou

Hardcover – June 22, 2010

Price
$19.73
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312600495
Dimensions
5.8 x 1.25 x 8.5 inches
Weight
14.4 ounces

Description

“Lou's story is an emotional and deeply felt tribute to the powerful bond between dogs and humans. Last Dog on the Hill will make you long for that one special super-dog that can truly change your life. We should all be so lucky to have a dog like Lou in our world.” ― Garth Stein, author of The Art of Racing in the Rain “ Last Dog on the Hill is a wonderful mixture of humor, heartbreak, and high jinks. I couldn't put it down. Lou will steal your heart.” ― Janet Evanovich, New York Times bestselling author of the Stephanie Plum series “When making your pile of 'best dog stories ever,' make space for another one. This book is great! Lou is a real working dog, not just a pile of emotive fluff. His exploits and accomplishments are nothing short of heroic. You will cheer for this dog and the fullness of his life. The relationship between Steve Duno and Lou is remarkable. We all want to know a dog like Lou. Here's your chance. There is a tear or two, but they are tears of joy for lives well-shared.” ― Greg Kincaid, author of A Dog Named Christmas “There's nothing whispery or mysterious about the connection between Steve Duno and his remarkable Rottweiler mix Lou. It's a full-voiced love story, a vigorous tale of rescue and mutual redemption, and an eloquent human-canine conversation that grows richer and deeper through the years. Last Dog on the Hill reminds us not only how much dogs can learn, but more importantly, how much they can teach us about the things that really matter -- loyalty, honor, hard work, and plenty of sheer delight.” ― Steven Winn, Author of Come Back, Como: Winning the Heart of a Reluctant Do “Everyone needs to experience a dog like Lou; and every dog needs a person like Steve Duno. Last Dog on the Hill is one of those rare animal memoirs that isn't sentimental, yet moves the reader to tears as easily as laughter. It also makes me wonder how many vocabulary words my dog knows.” ― Susan Wilson, author of One Good Dog “If Jack Reacher had a dog, he'd be Lou. If Jack Reacher were a dog, he'd be Lou.” ― Lee Child, New York Times bestselling author of the Jack Reacher series “There are so many accounts and testaments that verify beyond doubt that a dog is man's best friend. What makes this story special is that Lou, in terms of fate, was destined for a rough and unspectacular life. Lou and Steve found each other by sheer chance. Lou's life was richer for being Steve's dog, but the real twist of fate is how Steve's life and the lives of all those who knew Lou, were enriched forever.” ― Nuala Gardner, author of A Friend Like Henry: The Remarkable True Story of an Autistic Boy and the Dog That Unlocked His World “Anyone who has ever loved or lost a dog, or both, will be touched by this spellbinding story about two beings who crossed the human-dog divide and met on the other side.” ― Stefan Bechtel, author of Dogtown: Tales of Rescue, Rehabilitation and Redemption “Steve Duno describes Lou and himself as ‘neither dog nor human but family, just family.' Anyone who has ever loved with their heart wide open will want to come along for this ride. Unpredictable, heroic and funny…just like Lou.” ― Monica Holloway, author of Cowboy & Wills: A Love Story “Memorable from beginning to end, this tribute to a truly great dog will make you laugh, cry, and recall your own memories of special dogs.” ― Modern Dog Last Dog on the Hill is veteran pet behaviorist STEVE DUNO's eighteenth book. He has trained thousands of dogs, and a good number of cats. He lives in Seattle with his family and an ever-changing assortment of rescued pets. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1Rotties, Roadkill, and the Canine CartelBlack topcoat hairs and tufts of downy undercoat lay in the corners of our home, in the periphery, like ghosts. The black hairs were odorless but his undercoat still held scent, and I’d lift some of him up to my nose and be back in the mountains with him, listening to coyotes or owls, or to mice nibbling on the tent fly. In death he had spoken to me in a way he knew I would best appreciate. His smell, still there in the carpet, sidestepped my brain and went straight for the heart, where the memories are.The essential crime committed against all dog owners is born of the love we hold for them, which, like the love of a child, runs deep. No parent should have to bury a child, they say, but that is what we dog owners must do, not once but time after time, throughout our lives. While we remain unchangeable to their sweet eyes, they run from birth to the grave in an instant of our own mea sure. They burn like kindling, and though we know we can never replace one dog with another, we keep trying, in hopes of reviving hints of some great dog gone by. No; they are not children we bury. But dogs like Lou come close. They come very, very close.Highway 101 sweeps north into the small Mendocino County town of Willits, California, gateway to redwood country, home to vineyards and fast rivers, and to the resting place of Seabiscuit, the great race horse. And it is where I found Lou, the greatest dog I have ever known.In 1986, teaching degree in hand, I packed my Civic and left the grit of Queens for the glitz of Los Angeles. Upon arriving, I renewed an old fascination with dogs, one I’d first nurtured in childhood. Living in a one-bedroom New York tenement with my parents and brother, I’d asked for a dog but had gotten only a pale blue parakeet named Chipper, a bitter bird who’d bend apart the bars of his cage and escape, to strafe our heads and scream his discontent.In Los Angeles I read scores of books about breeding, training manuals, and pet magazines until I fancied myself a bookish “authority.” I thought I was ready for a dog of my choosing. Then chance changed the course of my life, and the lives of so many others.My girlfriend Nancy and I took a few December days off, packed the car, and drove up Highway 101 toward Northern California. The entire West Coast had fine weather; we took our time, often detouring over to the coast in places to enjoy the scenery.North of Ukiah, in Mendocino County, the highway snaked through the countryside. Halfway through a long, right sweeper, we spotted furry shapes porpoising up a steep grassy hill, toward the tree line above.“Puppies!” said Nancy. We pulled over onto the wide shoulder and got out.On the crest of the hill a half-dozen dogs scampered for the cover of trees; midsized, dark-coated mutts with shepherd looks, tongues flagging, teeth bright in the sun.“Five, six months old,” I said, suddenly aware of a much larger creature lying by the shoulder ahead, half hidden in the grass. An enormous Rottweiler, he basked in the sun like a Dakota buffalo, his black-and-tan coat dusted with dirt. And in his mouth rested the tawny snout of a limp, road-killed deer.“Don’t go near him,” I said, the deer’s snout crunching like a carrot stick in his jaws.“Not a chance,” Nancy said, more interested in the puppies, who had a lithe, black, shepherd mix with them, perhaps their mother.The Rottweiler gnawed away thoughtfully and watched us.Following their skittish mother up into the tree line, the pups were nearly out of sight. I gave a quick whistle just to see what would happen; all but one scampered off. But the last dog on the hill stopped, gazed down at the road, then made a mad downhill dash toward us, as if recognizing someone.Black and tan, it looked more like a diminutive Rottweiler than did the others. Like a Looney Tunes character, the quick little mutt skidded to a stop right in front of us, dropped into a perfect soldier-sit, then stared up at me like I was Simon Cowell. It was Lou.Those lucky enough to meet Lou were struck by his soulful eyes, riveting good looks and brotherly charm. People simply couldn’t get enough of him. But the dog sitting politely in front of me that day was anything but debonair. At most six months old, he had an infected tear on his throat, and ticks peppering his face and body. The bloated bugs hung like Christmas ornaments, even from the corners of his eyes and mouth and inside his ears and nose.“He’s infested,” I said. “And look at that gash.”“Look at his eyes,” Nancy said, grinning. “He’s gorgeous.”Lou looked up at me and let out an interrogative, “Rower?”“That gash is infected. And who knows anything about him.”“But look at him,” she repeated. “Look at those eyes.”I felt Lou’s warm breath on my hand. The sound of his dad crunching deer snout punctuated the swish of cars passing by.I petted him. He looked at me like I was Mother Teresa. Fleas popped off his head like seltzer bubbles and ricocheted off the palm of my hand.As I stood there wondering what to do, a pug-nosed Freight-liner pulling a load of timber hit its air brakes and snorted to a stop across the road, onto the shoulder. Out popped a gritty little guy in Levi’s and a dirty white T-shirt. He shuffled across 101 as if wearing leg irons.“The biggun yours?” he asked, pointing to the Rottweiler with a shaky cigarette, looking like he’d been up for a week.“Biggun?” I asked.“The biggun chawin’ on doe face,” he said, bouncing on the balls of his feet.The deer’s snout secure in his mouth, the Rottweiler eyed the little trucker. The big dog was thoughtful and calm, a first clue, perhaps, to what his son would become. I remember thinking at the time that this dog could kill us all without much fanfare, then go back to his venison sashimi. He didn’t, of course; he simply took the mea sure of the trucker for a moment, then kept chewing.“He’s part of a pack of strays that just ran up the slope,” I said.“Bitchin’ truck dog.”“I don’t know,” I said, picturing the jumpy little guy sideways in the big dog’s mouth.“I think I’ll take him.”“Oh I wouldn’t,” said Nancy.“I got a way with dogs.”Before the trucker could commit suicide by Rottweiler, a park-ranger pickup pulled over and a boyish-faced fellow got out, plugged on his ranger hat, and came over.“Howdy, folks,” he said, eyes on the Rottweiler and doe.“Gonna shoot him?” asked the trucker.The Rottie dropped the doe and shook drool from his rubbery black lips.“No. If he’d downed this deer on his own, we’d have to deal with him, but this was roadkill from last night. I saw it at sunrise on the side of the road.”“Rower,” said Lou.“You’d kill a dog if it hunted down a deer?” I asked.“Stray dogs that hunt deer get euthanized.” He seemed too nice of a guy to shoot a dog.“Who owns him?” asked the trucker, scuffling his cowboy boots in the dirt, moving closer to the Rottie.“This big boy and the shepherd bitch up the hill are guard dogs from a marijuana grow over on the other side of this ridge. This time of year there’s not much to protect, so they just wander about, looking for food.”“Marijuana grow?” asked Nancy.“Yeah,” he said. “Patches of pot grow all through here, mostly on national forest land. Big cash crop. Not much else to do around these parts.”Lou scratched himself, then looked up at me sweetly, calm but impatient, as if he’d made up his mind about us and expected the same.“I’m guessing this one and the pups up on the hill are his,” said the ranger. “Dad and Junior here seem sociable, but the rest are wild. A local rescue group tried to catch them last week, but they’re too cagey.”“I like that biggun,” said the trucker, rubbing his furrowed neck and snickering like a kid.“I’d think twice about him,” said the ranger. “There’s a reason why he hasn’t spooked yet.”“What about him?” I asked, petting Lou on his head, the fleas flying.“Tame, isn’t he? I bet he’d go with you. Lean and cut up, though. Might have gotten caught up on some barbed wire.”“Nothing that can’t be fixed,” said Nancy, already deep in Lou’s camp.“We’re four hundred miles from home,” I said. “He needs a vet and he’s infested.”I had imagined it this way: find a caring breeder, choose the perfect, healthy pup, frame the pedigree, and live happily ever after. I hadn’t planned on making a snap decision beside the road with giant dogs and dead deer and caffeinated truckers and ganja fields and boyish rangers and sweet gypsy eyes looking up at me, wondering when we’d be going home.“If you don’t want him, I’ll take him,” said the trucker, laughing oddly, as if he’d decided to slow-roast Lou at the next rest area.Nancy giggled. She knew what pushed my buttons.The big Rottie let go a thick stream of pee onto the asphalt, then stretched his back legs out one at a time. I wondered if Lou would get that big.“There’s a vet in Willits as you come into town,” said the ranger. He had a slow, bearish quality. I imagined him quietly tending to his own secreted pot patch. “It’s Sunday morning, though; you might have to wake him up.”The Rottie... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The moving story of the author's adopted Rottweiler mix, Lou, a free-thinking heroic dog who changed his life forever
  • Born of guard dogs on a secret marijuana farm in Mendicino County, Lou truly was one dog in a million. On the winter day that the ailing, tick-infested feral pup was rescued by Steve Duno, neither dog nor man had a clue as to what they were getting into, or where the relationship would lead.
  • Last Dog on the Hill
  • tells the story of an indigent young Rottweiler mix who, after abandoning his pack and the hills of his birth, went on to change the lives of hundreds of people and dogs, including the author's, whose career as a behaviorist and writer was made possible through Lou's extraordinary intelligence and heart. Lou won the respect of gang members, foiled an armed robbery, caught a rapist, fought coyotes and kidnappers, comforted elderly war veterans and Alzheimer patients in their final days, taught ASL to kids, learned scores of unique behaviors and tricks, amassed a vocabulary of nearly 200 words, helped rehabilitate hundreds of aggressive dogs and saved them from euthanasia. He was also a clown, consummate performer and Steve's best friend for sixteen years. His story will make readers laugh and cry in equal measures.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(229)
★★★★
25%
(96)
★★★
15%
(57)
★★
7%
(27)
-7%
(-27)

Most Helpful Reviews

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In Memory of a Star: "Last Dog on the Hill"

Lou was found on top of a hill in Mendocino County, with his family, a pack of wild dogs born from guards dogs on a nearby marijuana grow. He was covered in fleas and ticks, had an infected gash on his neck and a limp. But in his eyes, Steve Duno saw his new best friend.

He took Lou to a nearby vet who treated his injury, removed half a cup full of ticks, vaccinated and de-wormed him. The vet warned Steve that his bowel movements would be interesting, and was right: during their first day together, Lou eliminated a squirrel skull, sock string, foil, pebbles and a gum wrapper.

This was the beginning of their friendship, as told by Steve at his book signing for "Last Dog on the Hill" at Barnes & Noble last night. I attended assuming it would be the usual book signing, i.e. "buy my book" with little talk of the book itself. Instead, I left feeling transformed by the bond of love between Steve and one very special Rottweiler/Shepherd mix.

After a childhood of hunting for road kill and trash, Lou was not used to being confined to a house. The first time Steve left him alone for a five minute trip to the store, he returned to find the carpet ripped from the floor, a door unhinged, and the kitchen window shattered. On this day, Lou taught Steve his first lesson - that he needed to become a dog trainer. Since then, Steve has trained 8000 dogs and become an expert behaviorist and author. During his 16 year life, Lou also helped teach deaf children sign language and helped train other wild dogs how to behave in society, saving hundreds from euthanasia.

Steve was an in-house tutor for celebrity children, including Allysa Milano and Sidney Poitier's children, but the real star was Lou, whom he compared to Antonio Banderas and Al Pacino. A real Rin Tin Tin, Lou saved Steve's life twice, prevented a rape, foiled a robbery, survived cancer, comforted war veterans and sick patients during their last days, acted in a Washington State Lottery Commercial, graced the cover of a book, and knew over 200 words and commands. Even some of his friends were celebrities, like Jonathan Harris, Mr. Smith in "Lost in Space", who befriended him while tethered outside Steve's health club.

In the opening paragraph of the book, Steve relates how he could invoke the presence of the departed Lou from the smell in the carpet, his furs in the floor. I felt this way at the book signing, as if I had met Lou. His spirit lives forever through the memories of his owner, which are now being expressed in book signings across the US. In the words of Lou, "Arugula" (the sound of his bark).

"Last Dog on the Hill" is a wonderful tribute to a dog with a very powerful soul, the tale of the purest of love between dog and man and their mission together. You may want to include a box of tissues in your order. My eyes welled up three times in reading just a few pages.
99 people found this helpful
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A Dog's Life, Yet So Much More

"Last Dog on the Hill" goes beyond the bounds of a typical dog story. This book touches on more ethereal concepts of fate, love, kinship, life mission, and the eternal bonding of linked-souls. I bought this book anticipating a canine adventure. What I experienced was much greater, deeper, more spiritual.

First, Steve Duno is a wonderfully warm, yet sharp-witted writer. Throughout the book, I found my self pausing to muse over an observation or comment that required a double-take of reflection. Throughout Duno's pithy and light-hearted prose is a scattering of deeply emotional gems - life issues succinctly phrased in just such a way as to give the reader an experience of shared epiphany.

Second, the life of Lou is extraordinary, not just because of the amazing work that this heroic canine accomplished throughout his long and well-loved life, but because of the amazing bond that this brave and empathic pooch forged with with his uniquely quirky, ethical and devoted human partner. This is not a linear, 'Dog as Hero' saga. On the contrary, throughout the book I cringed, laughed, whooped and cried. Lou starts off like an angelic flea-bag foundling, reveals himself as an uber-Marley and then, with his master's limitless patience and determination transforms into the well-trained, thinking, master-redeemer of death-row dogs. One of the big questions that one might later debate is whether Steve Duno rescued Lou or whether it was Lou who rescued Steve Duno.

Of course dog-lovers will find inspiration for raising the bars on their relationships to their canine companions, in terms of training, approach and appreciation. Readers will also delight in the various colorful human and canine personalities who appear like special treats within each chapter. However, these goodies are secondary to the much greater depth of this book.

Yes, "Last Dog on the Hill" is a dog book; but it is so very much more.
41 people found this helpful
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Funny and heartwarming

I loved this book! It's a story about a very special dog but also about much more: love, friendship, loyalty, redemption... It is extremely well-written and the author's sense of humor comes through loud and clear. An easy, engaging read after which you wish you could have met Lou the wonder-dog yourself.
24 people found this helpful
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Odd Person Out

I realize I'm odd person out among reviews. I agree Lou was a fantastic dog! However I could only get through a few chapters before I had to put the book down. The author/owner was clueless and repeatedly put the dog in unsafe situations. The dog lived to a ripe old age to to his intelligence and in spite of the author's lack of intelligence. I know, I know he became a dog trainer.... personally I'd never leave either of my dogs with him, ever.
18 people found this helpful
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Compelling, Funny, Poignant... an EXCELLENT Read

I couldn't put this book down. The humor is what first struck me but, soon after, the compelling nature of the relationship between man and dog as well as the heroic exploits of Lou had grabbed hold of me. There are so many of us that can relate to that bond between canine and human, "Last Dog" takes that bond and shines a light on it. Can it be true love? Of course. Maybe not the kind one might think of when mentioning the words "true love" but, no truer love could there be.

Aside from the subject matter, the book is so well written. Duno is a master story-teller with a flair for both suspense and humor. I looked forward to each page and, as with all great books, was both sad and exhilarated as I read the last words. I loved this book.

Patrick S.
15 people found this helpful
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A Perfect "Tail"

Emotion, suspense, good cast of characters, wit and precision writing. These are the elements of a great read. And each of those elements is vividly present in Last Dog on the Hill. Steve Duno had a special relationship with a very special dog, Lou. His loss of his beloved pet is our gain as he chose to honor this amazing animal by immortalizing him with this beautifully written memoir. A must read for anyone because it transcends the "dog person" story and touches on the bonds between people as well as the bonds between humans and their pets and is filled with remarkable insight. A story that will bring its reader smiles, a few out-loud laughs, thought provoking moments and yes, more than a couple of tears. Who could ask for more in a book?
14 people found this helpful
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All Humans Should Read This Book

Since several reviewers have detailed the story, I will leave it to readers of this review to seek such information in the other reviews.

This book needs to be read by every human. It is a book that will live within ones heart, burying deep within ones mind and memories (if one has ever shared her/his heart, home, & life with a dog), and give voice to what many cannot express in words as to why they so love a certain dog.

Steve Duno's writing is lyrical. He clearly captures the personalities of all the people and dogs he encountered through his life with Lou, his beloved Rotti/Shepherd mix.

In the current saturation of dog books, this one stands alone and in the league of _The Dog Who Wouldn't Be_ and other outstanding dog books.

The author is one who achieved through his 16 year friendship with Lou the pinnacle of a human-dog relationship: That of being best friends and work mates. This bond, working together side-by-side brings out the best in a dog and in turn, the dog's human.

When one allows a dog to truly enter into ones life, the person is expanded, changed, challenged, and loved in ways that are beyond expression with words. Dogs reach the purest part of ones heart because they simply give the purest love.

The book is delightfully written with an exquisite combination of wit, psychology, self-reflection, philosophy, life, love, acceptance & understanding of dogs, and respect. I often found myself laughing aloud as I read of some of the author's adventures in dog training and life.

Alas, it is a book whose focus is a dog, and, tragically dogs do not live as long as humans. Knowing what lay in waiting at the end of the book, I slowed my reading pace as I did not want for the book to end, nor for the relationship, love, and bond between the author and Lou.

I was blessed to share my life with an East coast Lou. A Rotti/Shephard mix, who had never been inside a house, fended for himself, and got through 2-1/2 years of hard living in rural Maine & its cruel winters, chose me to be his human companion for the remainder of his life. Though I have shared my life with many other dogs, from childhood to now (my current rescue dog is asleep on my bed next to me as I write this), my beloved Rotti/Shepherd mix is the legend of my heart. The bond with such a dog is... there are no words for it. (So many of the adventures Lou shared with Steve were so similar to ones that I shared with my wild dog that I thought at times that I was reading about myself and my dog (though I am not in Steve's league as a trainer. Far from such.).)

Recently I reviewed another dog book. I gave it one star for the author lacks any understanding of dogs and their needs. This lack of understanding of dogs is reflected in her flat, lifeless writing of her dog tale. Perhaps she will read this book & learn to give to her dog what it deserves and needs. She treats a dog as an accessory to her life rather than sharing her life with her dog.

If I could, I would give this book 10 stars. This book touched a special place deep within my heart. It's the place where my dogs live, never dying. Dogs always get the best and purest part of our hearts because that is what they give to us. They makes us be better humans because they are better at love and forgiveness than humans.
10 people found this helpful
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Wonderful Story from Puppyhood through Death

Readers laugh and cry throughout this entire book. A stray uncared for puppy is rescued literally saving its life by an owner who actually keeps the dog throughout its entire life instead of ditching it whenever the owner moved or the dog became an inconvenience. The dog was family and not disposable trash. Lou could be any one's dog. His helplessness in old age handled with grace by both the owner and dog was touching.

I read the book in one day as I could not put it down. Read it while hugging your dog.
10 people found this helpful
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about love

I promised myself I wouldn't buy anymore more mushy books about dogs because too many read like a bad reality show: I just got divorced and thank goodness my dog was next to me when I was depressed, and then on about boyfriends and jobs. This book is really about a relationship of love, and anyone who has really been loved by a dog, and really loved a dog, understands love and dogs differently. The terror and not being able to give up when Steve loses lou, the respect for Lou's aging, buying a special steak to say thank you, the tail thumping, the paw holding. I really couldn't put this wonderful book down. It was a wonderful journey, thank you Lou.
9 people found this helpful
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One of the best

I approached reading "Last Dog on the Hill" with a bit of trepidation. Nearly all the dog memoir books that I've read inevitably end with the death of the dog.This always brings back painful memories of my dogs that have died, and sinks me into a deep depression. But Last Dog on the Hill was such a joyous story of a really fantastic pooch that it girdled me somewhat for what I knew was to come at the end. I've read quite a few dog books, ranging from the heartless "A good dog," in which author Jon Katz puts a perfectly healthy border collie to death simply because he cannot control the dog to much more humane books such at this one. And Katz is supposed to be an "expert" on dogs. The relationship between Lou and Steve in Last Dog on the Hill is about as close as an animal-human bond can be.They weren't dog and owner, but more like true family. Lou was Steve's brother in many ways. The love that Steve had for Lou is palpable throughout the book, and you can feel his pain when his beloved Lou started to show his age. The only other book that I've read that is comparable to this in terms of feelings and emotional depth was "Merle's Door," and this book is just as good. The commonality between both books, besides the depth of feeling that the authors expressed for their canine buddies, was the writing skill of both authors. I would strongly recommend this book to anyone who loves dogs and a great tale, but I must warn you: you will fall in love with Lou while reading this. That boy was simply irrestible, and a true hero to boot. If he were human, I'd vote for him for president. After all, he was far more intelligent than Sarah Palin. Steve relates how Lou changed his life. I can relate to that, too, since my first dog, Lily, changed my entire atitude about animals, going from relative indifference to deep caring and concern for all animal welfare.
7 people found this helpful