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Book cover

The dog year

Garvin, Ann Wertz. (Author).

Dr. Lucy Peterman was not built for a messy life. A well-respected surgeon whose patients rely on her warmth, compassion, and fierce support, Lucy has always worked hard and trusted in the system. She's not the sort of person who ends up in a twelve-step program after being caught stealing supplies from her hospital. But that was Lucy before the accident-before her husband and unborn baby were ripped away from her in an instant, before her future felt like a broken promise. Caught red-handed in a senseless act that kept her demons at bay, she's faced with a choice: get some help or lose her medical license. Now she's reluctantly sharing her deepest fears with a bunch of strangers, avoiding her loneliness by befriending a troubled girl, pinning her hopes on her husband's last gift, and getting involved with a rugged cop from her past. It's only when she is adopted by a stray mutt and moves her group to the dog park that she begins to truly bond with the ragtag dog-loving addicts-and discovers that a chaotic, unplanned life might be the sweetest of all

Book  - 2014
FIC Garvi
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Stamford Available
  • ISBN: 0425269256
  • ISBN: 9780425269251
  • Physical Description x, 325 pages ; 20 cm
  • Edition Berkley trade paperback edition.
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2014.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes discussion questions.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 17.00

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 0425269256
The Dog Year
The Dog Year
by Garvin, Ann Wertz
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Kirkus Review

The Dog Year

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Caught stealing supplies from her workplace, a bereaved woman is given the choice to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings or lose her job.It's been less than a year since tragedy struck Lucy Peterman: A car accident killed her husband and led to the miscarriage of what would have been her first child. She's been soldiering on in her job as a reconstructive surgeon for women who have lost breasts to cancer. On the outside, she seems to be doing well; yet she can't stop pilfering medical supplies and lifting small items from the grocery store. Lucy doesn't understand it herself, as she explains to the hospital administrator who confronts her: "I don't even know I'm taking it. I mean, I know I'm taking it, but it's like I'm watching someone else and I can't get her to stop." To keep her job, Lucy must attend AA meetings, the best free choice for addressing compulsive behavior in her small town. She also follows instructions to get counseling, although "she found therapists to be overly personal people prone to making generalizations and wearing clogs." Deeply skepticalin denial, some would sayLucy nevertheless makes connections in the group, especially after she adopts a stray dog. Slowly, Lucy comes to terms with her past and her new future. Garvin (On Maggie's Watch, 2010) is insightful about grief and the pervasiveness of denial. Those familiar with 12-step programs will recognize the brand of tough love depicted here. With humor and compassion, Garvin shows how recovery depends on honestyoften with other people who share an addiction, whether to booze, drugs or shopliftingand on helping others, whether stray dogs or stray people. Lucy's current problems are well-accounted for; one character, a troubled teenager, is an excellent foil for Lucy to re-examine the privileges she has enjoyed and overlooked. Even minor characters are brought to life, such as the malaprop-prone supermarket clerk who has a crush on Lucy (and is given a respectful outcome).Hopeful but not saccharine, this novel offers a deeply sympathetic view of recovery from grief. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.