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My Dog’s First Year
My Dog’s First Year
Oct 21, 2024 7:25 PM

Author:Ebury Press

My Dog’s First Year

Capture and treasure early moments with your new dog forever.

'The journey of life is sweeter when travelled with a dog'

From the first magical walk in the park together, to your pooch’s hilarious misadventures and mishaps, this book offers you prompts and cues to record that first wonderful year together, whether you have just welcomed a new puppy into your home or adopted an older dog.

This journal also provides info on how to prepare for their arrival, as well as handy tips for training and fun activities you and your dog can do together to build trust. In words and pictures, you can document how your dog settles in, how they respond to the dreaded B-A-T-H, their favourite food and treats, the journeys you take together and their birthday, among many other precious memories that you won’t want to forget. Something you can cherish forever, My Dog’s First Year is an invaluable record of your early days with your new best friend.

*Please note: this book is for life, not just for Christmas*

Reviews

A spellbinding nature diary that’s up there with the greatest… [Cocker] regularly follows up a beady description with a wild, glorious overview, followed by an astonishing fact or two… Hurrah for Mark Cocker! *****

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday

Being a naturalist, Cocker’s great strength is in the breadth of his senses: his essays seem to cover almost everything he has seen, heard or smelled in the land around his home. He writes clearly, and with a style that has a ring of poetry about it without being pretentious or precious… Spending time with his acutely observant essays will convince many readers that the Great Barrier Reef and vast jungles of Africa can be understood best only by first understanding the startling drama, diversity and complicated natural dynamics of a humble corner of Britain.

—— Ian Garrick Mason , Spectator

If you’ve never read Mark Cocker, then you must. His style is sharp, selfless, and wonderfully evocative, his knowledge deep and wide-ranging but lightly borne, his curiosity joyful and infectious.

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday, *Books of the Year*

If you can’t get out to enjoy the spring weather, immerse yourself in the natural world with Mark Cocker his writing transports you there.

—— Mail on Sunday

If you already know Mark Cocker’s work, you’ll need no persuading to buy this – if you don’t, treat yourself to a very fine collection of nature essays.

—— Matt Merritt and David Chandler , Bird Watching, *Book of the Month*

A Claxton Diary is a collection of his finest essays written on wildlife and encounters with nature.

—— UK Press Syndication

[Cocker] has a dream-like poetic edge, a touch of surreality that tips over into gentle humour… Cocker’s gift is that he can make you look – as he does – at blackbirds in a new way, or, shifting to the micro-scale, at ants bustling about in the cracks between paving slabs.

—— Brian Morton , Times Literary Supplement

A master of short-form writing… Cocker combines forensic observation of minutiae with grander universal truths… Exquisite essential reading.

—— Ben Hoare , BBC Wildlife

Wonderful.

—— The Simple Things

Mark Cocker is one of the many modern nature writers who I admire... and his latest book, A Claxton Diary, is as well written as all his others.

—— Paul Cheney , Paul Cheney's Books of the Year

Foer's new book urges the reader gently towards incremental adjustments - the idea being that if enough of us observe them, difference can be made

—— Monocle

Enough to induce an honest-to-God panic attack ... The margins of my review copy of the book are scrawled with expressions of terror and despair, declining in articulacy as the pages proceed, until it's all just cartoon sad faces and swear words ... To read The Uninhabitable Earth is to understand the collapse of the distinction between alarmism and plain realism

—— Mark O'Connell , The Guardian

There is much to learn from this book. From media and scientific reports of the past decade, Wallace-Wells sifts key predictions and conveys them in vivid prose.

—— David George Haskell , The Observer

Brilliant ... At the heart of Wallace-Wells's book is a remorseless, near-unbearable account of what we are doing to our planet

—— The New York Times

Not since Bill McKibben's "The End of Nature" 30 years ago have we been told what climate change will mean in such vivid terms.

—— Fred Pearce , The Washington Post

Everyone should stop what they're doing and read The Uninhabitable Earth by @dwallacewells. This is our future if we don't act now.

—— Johann Hari , Twitter

Wake up! Get educated - The Uninhabitable Earth by David Wallace Wells is a great place to start.

—— Paris Lees , Vogue

A book that's by turns alarming, terrifying and just downright bleak . . . a sustained piece of informed polemic.

—— The Evening Standard

A very accessible and compelling read . . . a much more nuanced and a much more hopeful vision than you might expect.

—— The Irish Times

I think everyone should probably right now read David Wallace-Wells's The Uninhabitable Earth, which tells the grim story with as much optimism as possible, and which gives all the facts.

—— Daniel Swift , The Spectator, Books of the Year

Well-written, captivating, occasionally wry and utterly petrifying

—— i News

In his gripping new book ... Wallace-Wells shocks us out of complacency'

—— Prospect

If you read just one work of non-fiction this year, it should probably be [this] . . . What this book forces you to face is more important than any other subject you could be informing yourself about.

—— David Sexton , The Evening Standard

Exceptionally well researched and written. . . . This short, concise book pulls no punches.

—— Mitch Friedman, executive director, Conservation Northwest

Yes, this book will scare you, but it will also prompt you to take action to ensure the damage we as humans have done to the planet is stopped.

—— Stylist, ‘Your guide to 2019’s best non-fiction books’

Most of us known the gist, if not the details, of the climate change crisis. And yet it is almost impossible to sustain strong feelings about it. David Wallace-Wells has now provided the details, and with writing that is not only clear and forceful, but often imaginative and even funny, he has found a way to make the information deeply felt. This is a profound book, which simultaneously makes me terrified and hopeful about the future, full of regret and new will.

—— Jonathan Safran Foer

Harrowing.

—— Jonathan Franzen , The New Yorker

The Uninhabitable Earth hits you like a comet, with an overflow of insanely lyrical prose about our pending armageddon.

—— Andrew Solomon

Just finished The Uninhabitable Earth by @dwallacewells. Everyone, everywhere, should read it. Can't remember the last time a book had such an impact on me.

—— Rutger Bregman, author of 'Utopia for Realists' , Twitter

On [Alexandra] Ocasio-Cortez's office bookshelf, near a picture of her late father and a photo of her with a local Girl Scout troop, two books nestle together in uneasy union. One is the Federalist papers. The other is The Uninhabitable Earth.

—— Time magazine profile on Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez

If there are people around to write history books in the future, they will look back at the @ExtinctionR protestors and think they were the sanest people of our time. Read The Uninhabitable Earth by @dwallacewells if you don't know why.

—— Johann Hari, Twitter

If we don't want our grandchildren to curse us, we had better read this book.

—— Timothy Snyder, author of 'On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twenty-first Century'

David Wallace-Wells argues that the impacts of climate change will much graver than most people realize, and he's right. The Uninhabitable Earth is a timely and provocative work.

—— Elizabeth Kolbert, author of 'The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History'

Trigger warning: when scientists conclude that yesterday's worst-case scenario for global warming is probably unwarranted optimism, it's time to ask Scotty to beam you up. At least that was my reaction upon finishing Wallace-Wells' brilliant and unsparing analysis of a nightmare that is no longer a distant future but our chaotic, burning present.

—— Mike Davis

A lucid and thorough description of our unprecedented crisis, and of the mechanisms of denial with which we seek to avoid its fullest recognition.

—— William Gibson

Brilliant at the futility of human action.

—— Sarah Crompton

A masterpiece of operatic proportions … What Powers means to explore is a sense of how we become who we are, individually and collectively, and our responsibility to the planet and to ourselves … A magnificent achievement: a novel that is, by turns, both optimistic and fatalistic, idealistic without being naïve.

—— Kirkus

His masterpiece.

—— Herald

You will careen through this book. The prose is driven. You don’t really get to draw breath … The writing is steel-edged, laser-sharp when Richard Powers wants it to be. When he sets out to nail meaning, it’s done. There are sentences you return to and wonder at.

—— Irish Times

This walk through the woods via words is a passionate paean to the natural world that prompts us to appreciate afresh our place on the planet.

—— i news

[I]t’s huge, it’s exciting, it’s wondrous … This really deserves to be read.

—— Bookmunch

The Overstory is a book you learn from.

—— Spectator

Dazzlingly written… Among the best novels I’ve read this decade… Despite its deep-time perspective, it could hardly be more of-the-moment

—— Robert Macfarlane , Guardian

A beautiful novel about humans reconnecting with nature in a fascinatingly, inventive world with colourful, rich characters, it will rekindle your love for nature

—— Asian Voice

An intriguing, powerful book

—— Maddy Prior , Daily Express

Absolutely blown away by this epic, heartbreaking novel about us and trees

—— Emma Donoghue

This extraordinary novel transformed my view of nature. Never again will I pass great tree without offering a quiet but heartfelt incantation of thanks, gratitude and wonder

—— Hannah Rothschild , Waitrose Weekend

A sweeping novel that skilfully intertwines many different stories of trees and people to create a paean to the hidden power and vital importance of the natural world

—— Country & Town House

Absorbing, thought-provoking and more than enough incentive to embrace your inner tree-hugger

—— Culture Whisper

The Overstory is filled with character and incident enough to engage anybody, but it's also filled with philosophy, science, poetry, and colour. It's a celebration of the world and humanity, but also tells of our coming doom. Perhaps above all it's a eulogy to trees. Eulogy is the right word because the novel celebrates the life, the beauty and wisdom of trees-but also their death. The novel also casts a cold-but loving-eye on humanity

—— Richard Smith , British Medical Journal

The Overstory has the mix of science and fiction that I so love; it widens my understanding and respect for the creatures who share this planet

—— KAREN JOY FOWLER

Stunning... It's been one of those rare books that has had a profound effect on me, and which has changed my perspective on life

—— Paul Ready , Yorkshire Post

Mind-boggling and visionary. The multi-stranded novel is a masterpiece in which science and poetry are deeply intertwined

—— Andrea Wulf, author of MAGNIFICENT REBELS , Guardian

A compelling read is that is near impossible to put down

—— Adoption Today

The Overstory is a prescient novel that urges us to take responsibility for our actions

—— Far Out

A masterpiece of storytelling at its very best. Powers weaves together science, poetry, nature and humanity so beautifully that it makes my heart ache and my mind fly

—— Andrea Wulf , Guardian

A wild and expansive novel, knitting together a glorious and diverse cast of characters, some of them human, some of them trees. I defy you not to be moved, and then angered about what we are doing to our planet and these glorious sentinels rooted upon it

—— Greg Wise , Week

My novel of the year was Richard Powers' masterpiece, The Overstory... it's a magnificent read

—— Mark Connors , Northern Soul, *Books of the Year*

The Overstory by Richard Powers is likely the most beautiful book ever written about people and trees

—— Andy Hunter , Spectator
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