Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Bringing home some ‘hairy joie de vivre’

Adoption of puppy inspires new book about developmen­t

- By Sarah Lyall

The last thing writer and dog behavior expert Alexandra Horowitz needed in the spring of 2020 was a new puppy.

Her family — three reasonable humans, two elderly dogs and one contented cat — was already “replete with animal fur,” she writes in “The Year of the Puppy,” her latest book. The pandemic was just taking hold. Why open the door to chaos?

Why did anyone get a new puppy during the pandemic? (Why didn’t everyone?)

Apart from the usual reasons, there were scientific considerat­ions for Horowitz, who runs the Dog Cognition Lab at New York’s Barnard College and whose books include the runaway bestseller “Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell and Know.” Long fascinated by canine umwelt — how they experience the world — she had never before studied a puppy’s developmen­t from its origins as “a mewling splodge of fur,” as she writes, into adolescenc­e and beyond. This seemed like the perfect opportunit­y.

She imagined herself as the canine-behavior equivalent of Swiss psychologi­st Jean Piaget, who used his own children as subjects in formulatin­g his theories of developmen­tal psychology.

But “The Year of the Puppy” became less scientific inquiry (though there is a lot of that in there) and more personal memoir, as the arrival of this tiny and vociferous being threw the family off its normal axis.

“It turns out that we were just too intertwine­d in her life,” Horowitz said in

a recent interview. “And as an observer, I’m not objective.”

After reading about what happened next, what you want is to meet the dog in question, named Quid (short for Quiddity). And there she was the other day, waiting with Horowitz on the sidewalk outside their apartment on the Upper West Side, a midsize mixed-breed dog with a sleek black coat, a scruffy schnauzer-like face and Brezhnev-esque eyebrows that gave her the appearance of a wise old man.

“It makes it easier for her to meet outside, because she’s complicit with us, and we’re all going into the house together,” Horowitz said, as Quid sniffed and woofed and clamored by way of hello. “It tempers her ardent enthusiasm, which she expresses through barking. Would you like a treat to give her?”

The conversati­on moved upstairs to Horowitz’s

apartment, where Quid attended to two of her favorite pastimes, chasing a tennis ball and being petted by Horowitz. Edsel, the calico cat, sprawled across a reporter’s notebook, knocking the pen out of the way, and began to purr amiably.

“The cat likes to find the thing you are using and sit on it,” Horowitz said.

Horowitz knew the woman who was fostering Quid’s mother, and so she met the puppies the day they were born. But when she brought Quid home, at the age of just under 10 weeks, Horowitz found that she did not fully take to Quid right away. And her previous assumption that canine idiosyncra­sies like jumping, barking and anxiety grew out of a dog’s early experience­s wasn’t borne out by the evidence.

“Her early life was not full of trauma, and yet nonetheles­s she was not the dog I hoped she would

be at first,” Horowitz, 53, said. “She wasn’t responsive to us in a way that I wanted her to be.” Quid was impulsive, eager to run heedlessly after squirrels and other elusive creatures, inclined to bark more relentless­ly and with less apparent purpose than Horowitz’s two older (and now, sadly, late) dogs.

And so the book is as much about how Horowitz adjusted to Quid as how Quid adjusted to the business of growing up, becoming “an exquisitel­y sensitive, preternatu­rally agile, sweet, loving creature,” Horowitz writes. “A member of our family.”

As we chatted, Horowitz’s husband, writer and editor, Ammon Shea, wandered over to make something in the kitchen. What was his opinion of Quid?

He considered.

“I think she’s fascinatin­g and full of excitement and love, and she has a hairy

joie de vivre — with a lot of hair and teeth — and she is untrammele­d in her enthusiasm­s, which is nice,” he said. “Nobody’s interested in a jaded dog.”

He added: “She is also kind of a pain in the tuchus because of those untrammele­d enthusiasm­s.”

Shea, an editor and researcher at MerriamWeb­ster, is also a writer who likes to dig deep into a subject; his books include “Reading the OED: One Man, One Year, 21,739 Pages.” Horowitz once worked at Merriam-Webster, too, as a lexicograp­her — defining words — after graduating from the University of Pennsylvan­ia with a philosophy degree. Her next job was as a fact checker at The New Yorker.

She returned to school and got her master’s and a doctorate in cognitive science at the University of California at San Diego. Her thesis was called “The Behaviors of Theories of

Mind, and a Case Study of Dogs at Play.”

At the Dog Cognition Lab, Horowitz studies dog behavior using subjects brought in by volunteers. She also teaches seminars in canine cognition, audio storytelli­ng and creative nonfiction.

Though she and her family have a house in upstate New York, where they spent much of the pandemic, she believes that the city is an excellent place for a dog — what with the smells, the constellat­ion of potential dog friends, the new experience­s, the connection with their people. (She doesn’t like to say “owner.” As she explained: “The longer I’ve lived with dogs, the less apt it’s seemed to me to think of them as possession­s.”)

“The city is very engaging, and with any reflection you can see that a city dog can do exceptiona­lly well,” Horowitz said. “As a person living in the city, you have to focus on and be attentive to what the dog needs. They need walks; they need socializat­ion. And the smells are phenomenal.”

Of course, the experience of raising Quid was heightened by the pandemic, as it was for so many people in similar positions.

“I saw her as a keeper of time, which was important because the days were blurring into each other,” Horowitz said. “Nothing in our life felt hopeful, but there’s something so hopeful about adding a puppy to the family.”

As Quid has learned from Horowitz, so Horowitz has learned from Quid.

“I feel now that I was way too focused on dog behavior,” she said. “Nothing slips by me, and it was too much for a puppy to bear. And over time, as I began to release my vise grip on the idea that she should be someone other than who she was, I began to appreciate her for who she really is.”

 ?? HIROKO MASUIKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Alexandra Horowitz is seen at home with her dog, Quid, and Edsel the calico Sept. 14 in New York. Horowitz, a canine behavioral expert, adopted a dog during the pandemic and turned her observatio­ns into a book.
HIROKO MASUIKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Alexandra Horowitz is seen at home with her dog, Quid, and Edsel the calico Sept. 14 in New York. Horowitz, a canine behavioral expert, adopted a dog during the pandemic and turned her observatio­ns into a book.

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