Sniffer Dogs: How Dogs (and Their
Noses) Save the World. By Nancy F. Castaldo. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
$7.99.
A Dog Like Daisy. By Kristin
O’Donnell Tubb. Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins. $16.99.
The wonders of canine
perception are difficult for humans to comprehend, for all that dogs are our
closest animal companions and have lived with and helped us for thousands of
years. Humans are primarily sight-driven, so it is very hard for us to understand
the intricacies of a smell-driven species such as dogs. But that does not stop
authors of both fact and fiction from delving into the mysteries of dogs’
perceptions and showing how intimately humans and canines can relate to, work
with and help each other. Nancy F. Castaldo’s Sniffer Dogs is a fine introduction to the topic, and fascinating
because it shows some of the many ways in which dogs’ super-sensitive noses can
and do save human lives – in an almost offhand manner, as if sniffing out
danger is the most natural thing in the world (which, to dogs, it apparently
is). Castaldo starts by explaining a bit about dogs’ anatomy and the way they
use not only their noses but also their Jacobson’s organs to perceive smells.
The Jacobson’s organ is often mentioned in connection with snakes, which use
their forked tongues to sample their environment and then process what they
pick up through this organ. But in fact, many animals have Jacobson’s organs –
they even develop in humans, although ours appear to be non-functional. In
dogs, though, the organs are highly active and very sensitive, helping dogs
form “a sort of image identifying [a] smell.” That is, we think of “image”
visually, but to dogs an image is a complex mixture of scents. “This ‘image’ is
even better than a [visual] photograph,” Castaldo explains, because it
“provides even more sensory clues.” Castaldo shows how dogs use their
hyper-precise nasal-imaging capabilities to search for and find missing people,
to detect explosives, to locate survivors of disasters, and much more. Dogs
seem to want to help humans – as the
result of untold generations of being bred for just such purposes – and the
techniques used to obtain their help are well-explained here. For instance,
dogs capable of finding people are chosen by being given a toy when they bark
during early training…then their trainers hide with the toy and give it to the
dogs when they locate the human and bark. The game goes on as long as necessary
to get the dog to associate receiving a toy with finding a live human and
barking. Castaldo does a first-rate job of explaining and showing this type of
training and discussing some surprising elements of dogs’ abilities: “You might
find it hard to believe that it can actually be easier for dogs to locate
buried bones than bones exposed on the surface of the ground. The reason is
that surface bones have a greater chance of breaking down and losing their
scent over time in the sunlight, wind, and heat.” And that is a perfect example
of the difference between sight-driven humans and odor-driven dogs: a killer
will bury a body so humans will not see it, but in doing so will make it easier
for a dog to locate and uncover it. Dog training for assistive and
law-enforcement purposes can be long and intense, but when it is over, Castaldo
says, “It’s pretty rare to see these dogs make a mistake after they have
finished training. A dog’s nose just knows.” The pictures of dogs scattered
throughout Sniffer Dogs all show
alert, involved, dedicated canines whose expressions, to human eyes, appear
focused and intense. People who owe their lives and their emotional stability
to sniffer dogs and therapy dogs and other assistive dogs know that the
seemingly almost magical power of dogs’ noses is something to cherish. Young readers
will understand that much better after going through Castaldo’s book.
To feel rather than intellectually accept the value and importance of
dogs as helpers of humans, though, requires a novel – a book with a predefined
story arc that can present events with a neatness and precision absent in the
real world. Kristin O’Donnell Tubb’s A
Dog Like Daisy is a fine example of this approach. The book is narrated by Daisy, a rescued pit bull mix
determined to succeed as a service dog helping a veteran cope with
post-traumatic stress disorder. Although there is no real way for a human
author to know what a dog thinks, or even if a dog thinks in any way translatable
to what humans mean by “thinking,” Tubb gives it her best shot and comes up
with some very effective scenes as a result. For instance, when Daisy first
comes home from the pound, she explores the house and realizes through smells
that “these humans are definitely new here.” Then she continues sniffing and
realizes that “the other humans who were here before had a dog. A dachshund.
Twelve years old. With a bladder infection.” Scientifically accurate or not,
that is a wonderful observation that certainly could be what goes through a dog’s mind. It is also a nice touch of
humor in a book that is, at heart, deeply serious. Although determined to
succeed as an assist dog – her 10-week training is being paid for by the
Veterans Administration, and she must go back to the pound if she fails – Daisy
repeatedly misinterprets what her new human pack wants or needs, and often lets
her outgoing and ebullient nature get the better of her when she needs to be
sober, attentive and concerned. So the book is all about adjusting: Daisy
adjusting to her new “pack,” and the human family trying to adjust to her
presence (Colonel Victor says that his “therapist says this is the best thing
for PTSD”). Daisy quickly becomes too
aware of what Victor needs, but cannot, of course, explain her perceptions to
the humans. For instance, when she is being trained using a noisemaking
clicker, she says it sounds like “giant bones snapping all around us. I know
the second I hear it that the Colonel doesn’t like it. I feel his shade
deepening.” But the trainer thinks Daisy is not doing well – until Victor
eventually helps sort things out. Who is actually training whom? Real-world dog
owners often wonder this, and in A Dog
Like Daisy the question is made explicit: Daisy thinks the humans with whom
she interacts are learning or not learning proper behavior, but they,
naturally, are focused on what she is
learning. There is a real-world power imbalance between humans and dogs – dogs
are considered property, and humans literally have the power of life and death
over them – and some of that leaks through in Tubb’s novel. But because it is a novel, not a real-world story, Tubb
can form it as she wishes. She can have Daisy take advice from a pet lizard,
contemplate the best role she can assume in life, and think through a way to fail a test
deliberately when that is best; and Tubbs can introduce a deus ex machina (actually a canis
ex machina) to solve the apparently insoluble problems of Daisy and the
Colonel and the Colonel’s family. The result is a tear-jerking climax that
leads to a wonderfully upbeat ending that could, really could, occur in the
real world. Nothing in A Dog Like Daisy
may be really real, but everything is
plausible, and as a story of how dogs might
think and what could happen in a
particular kind of dog-human relationship, this book is a tale that is very
well told indeed.
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