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100 Simple Secrets Why Dogs Make Us Happy: The Science Behind What Dog Lovers Already Know |  | Author: David Niven Publisher: HarperOne Category: Book
List Price: $11.95 Buy New: $3.22 as of 11/21/2009 17:02 MST details You Save: $8.73 (73%)
New (7) Used (7) from $3.12
Seller: bordeebook Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 544067
Format: Bargain Price Media: Paperback Pages: 224 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 6.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
Dewey Decimal Number: 158 ASIN: B001OW5NTG
Publication Date: May 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Why do people who have dogs live happier, longer, and more fulfulling lives? Sociologists and veterinarians have spent years investigating the positive effects that dogs have on people's health and happiness yet their findings are inaccessible to ordinary people, hidden in obscure journals to be shared with other experts. Now the international bestselling author of the 100 Simple Secrets series has collected the most current and significant data from more than a thousand of the best scientific studies on the profound relationship between humans and our canine companions. These findings have been boiled down to the one hundred essential ways dogs positively impact our lives. Each fact is accompanied by a inspiring true story. If you love your dog, and science tells us that you do, this book will inspire and entertain. Communicate Better: It sounds odd to say a creature that communicates with barking and body language can have such a profound effect on human communication. But by providing a common point of reference and concern, dogs help us to feel a connection to other humans. That connection makes us feel more comfortable communicating with each other. When meeting a new person, the presence of a dog reduces the time before people feel comfortable while talking with each other by 45 percent. Live Longer: There is perhaps no better gift that dogs offer us humans than this simple fact. People who care for a dog live longer, healthier lives than those who do not. On average, people who cared for dogs during their lives lived 3 years longer than people who never had a dog. No Monkey Business: Primates are genetically more similar to humans than any other creature. But try to tell a chimpanzee something and you will be hard pressed to get your message across. Dogs are uniquely attuned to the messages we send. Dogs study humans and have evolved to build social skills that help them to function around us. Dogs are 52 percent more likely to follow human cues such as pointing toward a source of food than are primates. Around the Block: Good habits are often misunderstood as difficult or unpleasant chores. But there is tremendous value in the simple act of taking a walk. Walking not only burns calories, it also decreases stress. Having a dog means regularly talking walks – it's something you do for your dog but in truth your dog is doing for you. Dog owners walk 79 percent farther in an average week than non–dog owners.
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| Customer Reviews: Every Dog Lover's Book April 13, 2009 Kathleen A. Ebey (Aiea, HI) This is a great book for every dog lover. It is made up of 100 "chapters", each about 2 pgs long. And each covering a different subject. I love just picking it up when I have a few extra minutes and reading one or two "chapters". I often learn something new, but always get a "warm, fuzzy feeling". It's especially soothing when you are about to swat some little fur-ball's butt! And we have 3......
Not Really Scientific June 16, 2008 dd (Ohio) A light, and quoting another reviewer, "uplifting and pleasant" read, but very little science, just a brief statement citing a study at the end of each, essentially one-page, story.
What I don't like about this book is the layout. Almost all the stories could fit on one page but the publishers used a lot of white space, started each story quite a bit down from the top of the page so that they would stretch over two-pages. Essentially, this book is about 112 pages of text. I would rather they had designed the book with the stories on one page even if it meant a blank page across from the story. In fact, this blank page could have been the spot for the scientific evidence to back up the story ... story on one page, scientific support on the other.
What I liked about the book was the human-dog connection in these stories, but not enough to buy the book. Although, if I received this as a gift, I would keep it.
More about humans than dogs April 27, 2008 2 dogs and a cat (Arkansas) The book takes dog actions and relates them to humans. Great for reviewing yourself and your actions
Want to smile? October 3, 2007 Jeri Nevermind (Idaho) 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
This is a tiny book. The kind your parents put in your stocking at Christmas. But it's also charming, cute, and sure to make you smile.
There are one hundred short chapters in this book, mostly only one page, each one with a title like "Dogs Take Us Walking" and "Families With Dogs are Closer", and each with a short story about dogs. It's uplifting and pleasant. At the end of each short chapter the author includes a study that has been done on dogs. Here was one I especially liked: "While there is a significant long-term effect of dogs on our health, cats have no effect on us" (p 68).
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