Clara, the Early Years
The Story of the Pug Who Ruled My Life
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- $5.99
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
Pugs were dogs. Cute dogs, willful dogs, lovable to be sure, but I was a Human. I was in charge.
Then along came Clara, and all bets were off.
Once a pug owner, always a pug owner--or so thought Margo Kaufman, having shared her home with the lovable snub-faced imps since her college days. But it was not until the 1992 arrival of Clara--petite, imperious, whip-smart, and seductive--that Margo found what it meant to be a pug parent: that a pug could rule her life, and perhaps the world as well.
Clara, the Early Years is the hilarious story of how a glossy-black, twelve-pound package of canine energy took over Margo's heart and home while charming the pants off the rest of the world. From commandeering the dressing rooms at Saks (where a personal shopper offers Clara Evian in a cut-crystal bowl), to accompanying Margo on her first book tour, to an appearance on PrimeTime Live (where Margo plays a supporting role), the indomitable Clara establishes herself as a world-class personality, a star of the first order. But there is one event Clara cannot upstage, as Margo and her husband, Duke, travel to Russia to adopt an infant boy, and all of them learn new meanings for parent, family, and home.
Full of the kind of uproarious observations and brilliant insights that have won Margo Kaufman's books and commentary legions of loyal followers, Clara, the Early Years is a laugh-filled portrait of a singularly memorable pet.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Most of those who live with animals concede to their whims and finally admit who is pet and who is master. Kaufman (This Damn House!), Hollywood correspondent for Pug Talk magazine, knows who rules her life--Clara, an ebony pug, and Sophie, Clara's sister. "Who knew that small wrinkled dogs with pushed-in faces would prove to be the greatest commitment of my life?" asks Kaufman in this delightful book. Dubbing herself "the Official Pug Lollipop," the author extols the dog's virtues and relates its drawbacks with irony and compassion. She recounts visits to a breeder with a "Pug Wall of Glory," to "snooty" pet stores, to clothing stores and, with Clara, to TV and radio stations where the dog garners more attention than her human. By the book's conclusion, both Clara, "the little princess" who is wont to attack dogs 10 times her size, and Sophie need to learn to share the spotlight, as the author and her husband make a human addition to the family. After the taxing and hilarious adventure of adopting a foreign baby, Kaufman finds raising an infant not unlike raising a pug. Among her son Nicholas's first words are "Clara," proving that the pugnacious canine retains her claim on ruling the household. This memoir will charm anyone who loves dogs. As Kaufman notes, "Pugs are living proof that God has a sense of humor"--and so does the author, in spades.
Customer Reviews
I couldn't put the book down!
I'm a pug mother of two, and a human mother of three! Awesome read! It was very relatable!
One of my all time favorite books!
Very touching.