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A Dog's Gift

The Inspirational Story of Veterans and Children Healed by Man's Best Friend

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A decade ago, former military counterintelligence officer Terry Henry joined his precocious young daughter, Kyria, on a trip to a nursing home in order to allow its residents to play with their family dog, a golden retriever named riley. Terry was astounded by the transformations that unfolded before his eyes. Soon after, Terry and Kyria started their service dog organization, paws4people, with the goal of pairing dogs with human beings in need of healing, including traumatized and wounded war veterans and children living with physical, emotional, and intellectual disabilities.
In A Dog's Gift, award-winning journalist and author Bob Drury movingly captures the story of a year in the life of paws4people and the broken bodies and souls the organization mends. The book follows the journey of pups bred by the organization from their loving, if rigorous, early training to an emotional event that terry and Kyria have christened "the bump," where each individual service dog chooses its new owner through an almost mystical connection that ignites the healing process. incorporating vivid storytelling, insights into canine wisdom, history, science, and moving tales of personal transformation, A Dog's Gift is a story of miracles bound to be embraced by not only the 60 million Americans who own dogs, but by anyone with a full heart and a loving soul.
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    • Library Journal

      June 15, 2015

      "Can a heart break and soar simultaneously?" So muses Drury (contributing editor, Men's Health; coauthor, The Last Stand of Fox Company) while observing a profoundly challenged child being helped by her "mobility assistance dog." The animal is supplied courtesy of Paws4People (p4p), the service-dog breeding and training organization founded and run by former naval intelligence officer Terry Henry and his daughter Kyria. Drury spends a year exploring the many branches of the outfit, reporting the astounding healing powers the dogs have on "bruised and bent human beings," including the war veterans and prison inmates who help train the dogs. Emotionally nuanced throughout, the book is especially sensitive to the PTSD-related demons of Henry; the careful way Drury teases out his story is one of many interesting narrative strands. Another involves the author himself--a flinty former war correspondent with family issues--who experiences a positive transformation. The book closes on a high with an account of the "Bump," an event in which the dogs choose the humans they'll assist. VERDICT This feel-good story manages to avoid the treacly effect that often accompanies the "inspirational." Animal lovers, especially dog owners, will enjoy it greatly.--Robert Eagan, Windsor P.L., Ont.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2015
      As a "streetwise crime reporter [and] hard-bitten war correspondent," Men's Health contributing editor Drury considered himself a "tough guy"-until he decided to write about the nonprofit paws4people, which trains therapy dogs to work with veterans suffering from PTSD. The organization-which now includes offshoots paws4vets, paws4prisons, and paws4reading-began 14 years ago when Terry Henry, who was trying to cope with the aftermath of field experiences as a counterintelligence officer, accompanied his daughter Kyria and their dog to nursing homes to cheer up elderly shut-ins. Their visits soon branched out to special education classes in their local schools. Over time, they broadened the scope of their activities to include breeding and training services. Henry was so uplifted by the experience, the author writes, that "he threw himself into the cause of healing others through the power of dogs"-and in the process, he healed himself. He and Kyria have placed dogs in the homes of more than 400 children and veterans with physical and mental disabilities, at no charge. In 2010, they were approved by the Department of Defense to run a pilot program to train service dogs to assist veterans on a long-term basis. They solicit contributions to support their operation, which costs approximately $35,000 per dog, and they rely on recruitment of prison inmates as volunteer trainers (as an accredited part of inmate vocational training). Drury traveled with Henry and observed life-changing moments not only for the new dog owners, but also for prisoners whose lives were transformed by becoming trainers. He also chronicles painful occasions when Henry was forced to exclude an unsuitable trainer from the program or eliminate a veteran incapable of forming a relationship to a dog. Even this formerly hard-bitten reporter notes how he teared up on occasion. Overly sentimental but a great story nevertheless.

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