Authors: Bark Editors
Contents
1. Here’s the Beef
[Bonnie Thomas Abbott]
2. How to Tell the Difference Between Your Mother and Your Dog
[Henry Alford]
3. Two Pooch or Not to Pooch?
[Jon Bowen]
4. I Done Them Wrong: How I Wrecked My Daughter’s Self-Esteem and My Dog’s Sex Life
[Cathy Crimmins]
5. The Dog Mumbler
[Merrill Markoe]
6. How to Change Your Adopted Dog’s Name to the Name You Want in under Six Months
[Brian Frazer]
7. All the Bags and Dante and Me
[Pam Houston]
8. How You Can Help Your Dog Enjoy a Visit to the Vet
[Michael J. Rosen and Mark Allen Svede]
9. Better Than You
[Jon Glaser]
11. Ball and Chain
[William Wegman]
12. Dog of the Day
[Laurie Notaro]
13. Home on the Mange
[Neal Pollack]
15. A Catwoman in Dogland
[Kathe Koja]
17. A Second Act
[Alice Elliott Dark]
20. Confessions of an Amateur Pickup Artist
[David Malley]
21. Pillow Talk
[Gregory Edmont]
22. The Seven-Month Itch
[Nancy Cohen]
23. Play Dead, My Darling
[Jeff Ward]
24. Where the Dogs Are
[Dan Zevin]
25. A Plea for Canine Acceptance
[Phil Austin]
26. The Good Place: A Play in One Act
[Roy Blount Jr.]
28. This Dog’s Life
[J. P. Lacrampe]
29. Why I Write About Dogs
[Susan Conant]
30. What My Dog Has Eaten Lately
[Bonnie Jo Campbell]
31. Canine Films Currently in Production
[Brian Frazer]
32. Strange Bedfellows
[Kinky Friedman]
33. Doggy Love
[Scott Bradfield]
34. How to Raise and Train Your Mini-Berger-with-Cheese-Doodle
[Georgia Getz]
35. Something Extremely Important
[Merrill Markoe]
36. 13 Questions
[Susan Miller]
37. By Fifteen Minutes
[Melissa Holbrook Pierson]
38. Joni Mitchell Never Lies
[Marc Spitz]
39. Carolina’s in Heat and I’m Not
[Abigail Thomas]
41. Part Pooch, or: More Than an Act
[David Smilow]
42. Do You Take This Norwegian Elkhound?
[Alysia Gray Painter]
43. Becky Has Two Daddies
[Robert Masello]
44. Can We Interest You in a Piece of Cheese?
[Alison Pace]
45. One-on-One with Triumph the Insult Comic Dog
[Catie Lazarus]
46. A Gentleman’s Ideal Companion
[Dave Barry]
47. Excerpts from Great Books in the Canine Canon
[Francis Heaney]
48. One Step Out of the Dog House
[Frank Gannon]
49. Seven Days of Finny
[Ann Brashares]
52. Let the Heeling Begin
[Bill Scheft]
55. The Dinner Party: A Screen Treatment
[Erica Schoenberger and Melissa Webb Wright]
56. She Who Must Be Obeyed
[Tom Gliatto]
57. Our Twelfth Labor
[Ben Brashares]
59. Tool: Retractable Dog Leash $10.95–$39.95
[Jeff Steinbrink]
60. A Dog for All Seasons
[Patrick F. McManus]
61. How to Housebreak Your Dog
[Mark Newgarden]
62. Canine Einstein?
[John Warner]
63. Seven Protective Popeyes
[George Singleton]
64. An Open Letter from Miss Ruby to Her Problem Owner
[J. F. Englert]
66. No Wonder They Call Me a Bitch
[Ann Hodgman]
67. Leave Some for Me, Fido
[Rebecca Rose Jacobs]
68. Dog Is My Co-Dependent
[Meghan Daum]
About the Contributors
Katrina Mutts
[Patrick McDonnell]
We dedicate this book to our mothers,
who are somewhere laughing.
Foreword
M
Y SINGLE GREATEST
qualification for introducing this collection may be that I’ve never had a dog. Stephen Crane was never a soldier and wrote
The Red Badge of Courage.
Likewise, I can be dispassionate and more critical of the cult of sentimentality surrounding “man’s best friend.” I see things that besotted dog owners cannot see through their slobber-covered glasses.
My friend Catherine, an otherwise self-possessed woman and accomplished filmmaker, used to call me regularly with updates on Jock, her Flat-Coated Retriever: “Jock had his first swim!” “Jock had his first playdate!” “Jock fetched his first ball!” (The retriever part took a while to kick in.) She and her husband, Grant, created a whole history for Jock: He moved from rural North Carolina to Paris, where he wrote beat poetry until he ran out of money. Then he trained to become a hairdresser and ended up running a wildly successful salon in the sixth arrondissement, before moving to Washington, D.C., to become Catherine and Grant’s dog. (Huh?)
This kind of anthropomorphization may seem harmless. But as a rational observer of dogs I am concerned that we’re bringing dogs down to the level of humans. Dogs are dogs—nothing less. In my book describing the vital role dogs have played in White House decision-making, I recounted how dogs saved us from nuclear catastrophe during the Cuban missile crisis. They’ll probably end up saving Social Security. (I also believe we should unloose a Newfie on Kim Jong-il. A good face-licking would soften him up and he’d give up his nuclear weaponry in a Pyongyang minute.)
So enjoy this book. Let dogs make you laugh. Then let them get back to the business of running this country.
—M
O
R
OCCA
Introduction
“A DOG WALKS into a bar…”
Cats are enigmatic. Horses have a noble air. Pigs are gregarious. But dogs are by nature funny—they make us laugh. As any comedian will tell you, timing is everything, and have there ever been creatures with better timing than dogs? They always seem to be there at just the right moment, or just the wrong moment, depending upon whom the joke is on. A pot roast left unguarded. An open bedroom door. An ill-timed squat. How quickly tragedy turns into comedy with a dog. A comedy of manners, fish out of water, parody, slapstick—all genres of humor are fair game with a dog.
If indeed timing is everything, then the time seems right to bring out this collection of canine-inspired humor—we could all use a little laughter. And a book of wit and humor seemed like an excellent follow-up to our first book,
Dog Is My Co-Pilot: Great Writers on the World’s Oldest Friendship,
an anthology of essays that explored the bonds between human and canine. As founders and editors of
The Bark
, we take our role of reporting on canine culture seriously, but not so seriously that we can’t poke fun at the dog world we’ve chronicled and helped create over the last decade. Admit it, even the most devoted dog lover will occasionally pause and think,
This is crazy!
Or, at least, uncommonly funny.
“A Democrat, a Republican, and a dog are waiting in line to vote…”
Do animals smile? Do they laugh? Both science and literature have taken on these age-old questions, and evidence shows that, indeed, animals
do
have a sense of humor. In a paper titled “Do Dogs Laugh? A Cross-Cultural Approach to Body Symbolism,” noted anthropologist Mary Douglas sets out to prove that we can divide human from animal along the fault line of laughter. She cites Konrad Lorenz’s
Man Meets Dog
and Thomas Mann’s
A Man and His Dog
to show how the panting, slightly opened jaws of man’s best friend “look like a human smile” and can give “a stronger impression of laughing.” (We have daily evidence of this as we sort through the many submissions to our ongoing “Smiling Dog” contest, a
Bark
reader favorite.) Scientists such as Dr. Jaak Panksepp have also shown that rats respond with laughter-like sounds when tickled, and cite studies performed by Patricia Simonet, which note that the breathy exhalations of dogs at play are evidence of a level of joy biologically similar to laughter. It seems that dogs do have a sense of humor, or at the very least, playfulness. This may explain why your dog can make you look like a fool several times a day.
“Two dogs are sitting in a vet’s office. One says to the other…”
When we began planning this anthology, we thought we’d include a few older pieces, but were surprised to discover how much our sense of humor has changed with regard to dogs. In many of the venerable examples of dog-related humor—over the past century—the dog was the butt of the joke; even worse, humor was found in cruel treatment inflicted upon dogs. Is this any way to treat a trusted friend? It’s an indication of how far we have come that we no longer find amusement in their suffering or laugh at inhumane acts perpetrated upon them. As with all cherished friends, we prefer to laugh with our dogs, rather than at them.
Thus, we were inspired to start fresh, to look for what is funny in today’s dog world. We also gathered work from a variety of sources—acclaimed humorists (Merle Markoe, Roy Blount Jr., Kinky Friedman), popular performing comedians (Al Franken, Margaret Cho, Marga Gomez), noted literary authors (Haven Kimmel, Pam Houston, Alice Elliott Dark), and accomplished behind-the-scenes comedy writers whose work has provided the backbone for the likes of
The Late Show with David Letterman, Late Night with Conan O’Brien,
and
Saturday Night Live.
We made it a point to include a number of younger authors who have a certain generational edge to their work, as well as writers who have often appeared in
Bark
magazine (Lee Harrington, Alysia Gray Painter, Greg Edmont). We also tapped into noted “fidosopher” Michael J. Rosen’s wellspring of humor. In the end, we assembled nearly 70 pieces ranging from personal essays and parodies to satires and aphorisms. Like the dogs we love, no two are alike. We’re very pleased with the mix.
Despite the mirth-provoking stories included in this book, we realize that far too many dogs face an uncertain—and definitely not amusing—future. In the fall of 2005, following Hurricane Katrina, we ran a special section in the magazine covering the storm and its aftermath, not only for dogs and their families but also for Gulf Coast humane and animal rescue organizations. The magnitude of the disaster was almost too much to take in, and it inspired us to look for a long-term way to help with the rebuilding efforts, which are ongoing as we write this, nearly two years later. With the support of our publisher and contributors, we have made a commitment to donate all royalties from the sale of this book to these organizations. Your purchase of the book assists with this effort.
We hope the pieces herein bring a smile or chuckle, or even a guffaw. In sharing a laugh, you’re also helping some hounds find a way home.
—C
AMERON
W
OO AND
C
LAUDIA
K
AWCZYNSKA