spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img
Home Blog Page 598

Coloring Books for Adults

0

lalaRemember when you were a kid, you could sit and color for hours? Isn’t there still a little bit of that kid trying to escape? The one that looks at kids coloring books with not only fondness, but desire? Or that inner child that wants so badly to purchase that 64-Crayon box? Well, head to the office supply section because these coloring books are for you!

La La Land: Creative & Mindful Colouring Books for Adults has just launched a Kickstarter program creating coloring books for adults. The Austrailia start-up hopes to release coloring books to “help people with mindfulness and creativity.”

 

From the Kickstarter Page:

“Colouring books for adults are huge right now – they give us the opportunity to tune out and unplug from our daily schedules and relax. Colouring books can also help us connect with our inner child both through creativity and nostalgia. Studies show that colouring books are also great for relieving stress.

Follow this link to their video.

 

 

 

 

 

 

SNEAK PEEK: Constant by Megan Slayer

0

constant_800He demands his submissive’s body and soul…but can he accept his sub’s heart?

Roddy Green never planned to fall in love and certainly not with his Dom, but every time he goes into Darkness, a fetish club, he falls for Vegas all over again. Being in love isn’t the same as being loved in return. Vegas is there to do a job—not to build a romance. But what if the main constant in Roddy’s life is also the one person he can’t live without?

Andrew Vegas knows his job. He’s a Dom. But there is more than one side to him and he’s tired of keeping the other parts of him hidden. One man makes him feel safe and comfortable enough to open up—his pet, Roddy. But will Roddy, the producer of a local news broadcast, want to be with a man with secrets?

Reader Advisory: This book contains references to light knifeplay.
Publisher’s Note: This book contains characters who also appear in Permanent.

EXCERPT:

“I’m so ready to be done with this place.” Roderick Green tossed his stylus onto the desktop and groaned. He wasn’t going to be able to leave until at least nine p.m. Damn it. He’d come into the news room at six that morning. Fifteen hours of scheduling, sorting through news stories and dealing with the broadcasters who didn’t want to cooperate. He was damn near pulling his hair out.

He’d been a producer at Channel 25 for the last eight years. He liked his job. The news of the nation as well as local stories colored the broadcasts. The channel featured plenty of sports stories, courtesy of one of his best reporters, Tory McClellan.

Most days, he loved his job. Bringing the news and working with the various groups made him happy. Today? Not so much.

He flipped through the papers on his desk then turned to his tablet. Of all the stories planned for the next week, he had Tory’s schedule, but that was all. He needed more than what Tory had given him. The broadcast couldn’t feature one reporter.

But hell, he’d lost two of his reporters that year. Filling their spots hadn’t been easy. He gritted his teeth. Speaking of the new reporters, where in the hell was their work?

He punched the numbers on his desk phone. Someone needed to give him answers and fast. After three rings, Holden, the main news reader, answered. “Yes, sir,” Holden said. “I’m currently working on that piece about the community center. I’m trying to get interviews with the staff. The work they’re doing with the young men and women is really inspirational.”

“Great, but I need stuff for the end of this week,” Roddy bit out. “Come on.”

“Ask Susan. She’s got a fluff piece on the animal rescue center. I thought she was finished.”

“She’s not.” But he’d be sure to contact her next and give the weather girl some explaining to do. He didn’t mind that she wanted to branch out and work on other stories, but she wasn’t keeping up with her own workload.

“I’ll have mine done this weekend and will have the comeback kid story about the young man who helps the Tigers ready by tomorrow. He was a talker, but I’ve got enough to do the story justice.”

“Fine.” Actually, really freaking good. “Okay. I can work with that. I’m looking forward to the footage.” Roddy groaned. “Tomorrow.”

About the Author:
wendiI’ve always dreamt of writing the stories in my head. Tall, dark, and handsome heroes are my favorites, as long as he has an independent woman keeping him in line. I love playing with words and letting the characters run wild.

NASCAR, Ohio farmland, dirt racing, animals and second chance romance all feature prominently in my books. I also write under the pen name of Megan Slayer. I’m published with Total-E-Bound, Changeling Press, Liquid Silver Books, Turquoise Morning Press, Decadent Publishing and The Wild Rose Press. Come join me for this fantastic journey! Learn more about Megan and her books by visiting her website.

Grab your copy of CONSTANT here.

Reader’s Entertainment Radio Presents: Tina DeSalvo

0

What a pleasure it was to have author Tina DeSalvo join me tonight to chat about her books, life, cajun country, Tante Izzy’s Pain Perdu, and her Friend’s Fight Together initiative to help raise Breast Cancer awareness and support.  Tina and I connected at the RT Booklover’s Convention, so it was extra special for me to have her on the show to catch up, and to learn more about her many passions.  Tina enjoys writing stories where she can use her imagination, humor, empathy, and personal experiences to create characters and situations that she hopes will entertain readers. Her debut book in the Second Chance Novel series, Elli, brought her in close contact with so many readers which she adores. She loves sharing stories, laughs, tears and hugs. Elli was particularly close to my guest’s heart because she drew on her personal experiences as a breast cancer survivor and those of the people she met while undergoing treatment to tell Elli’s story as a breast cancer survivor.  Her latest novel, Jewell: A Second Chance Novel, is Volume 2 in the series.

Jewell Cover - MedBook Blurb:

Once invited into New Orleans’ historic mansions to evaluate prized antiques, Dr. Jewell Duet held a coveted professorship at a top university. With her deep knowledge of Louisiana history and antiquities, she was the go-to person for anyone requiring professional appraisals. But, one hasty decision cost her both her reputation and possibly her freedom. Now, as she waits to discover if her future includes prison, Jewell knows that taking the job at Sugar Mill is necessary if she is to support her beloved grandmother who has advanced dementia.

Charming, sexy lawyer Beau Bienvenu’s attraction to the intriguing historian vies with his distrust of her motives. Beau has one simple goal when it comes to the family that rescued him and made him part of their clan…protect them at all costs. He doesn’t trust Jewell, nor her reason for taking the lowly job at Sugar Mill Plantation. What is she really up to? Is it possible Jewell and her quirky grandmother are there to try to profit from a Bienvenu family mystery? If so, both women are out of luck.

Jewell and Beau are at odds about almost everything. The only things they agree on are that family is everything…and that their mutual attraction is inconvenient.

Hope, Love and Second Chances Continue in the heart of Cajun Country.

Click the book cover image above to listen to the podcast!

 

Connect with Tina DeSalvo on Social Media:

www.tinadesalvo.com

https://www.facebook.com/TinaDeSalvoAuthor

Tina DeSalvo
Tina DeSalvo

 

Great Women’s Fiction!

 

 

Publisher Launches ‘Cultural Website’

0

glomGlommable – an innovative new ‘cultural website’ devoted to the ‘best-of’ from authors, creators and Internet personalities. Created by Simon & Schuster’s Touchstone imprint, Glommable provides video interviews, original content and quizzes.

 

Features of the new site will include, “Glom O’ The Week” featuring a web creator, and ‘Lit Wiz’ highlighting literary polls, quizzes, and book battles.

Here’s more in Glommable’s own words:

Today more than ever, bloggers, vloggers, artists, and tweeters are pushing the boundaries of content sharing on the web. Their rabid audiences are hungry for more—more stories, more details, more illustrations, more THEM. And these content creators are responding by bringing their online material to fans new and old in the form of print books and ebooks, where they have hundreds of pages to expand, riff, draw, explore, and grow. From bookstores to other retailers, from YouTube to Goodreads to Reddit to Tumblr, readers today are everywhere, discovering, sharing, tweeting, pinning, liking, and generally devouring content they love on any platform or device they can.

GLOMMABLE is the one place online that brings the internet’s most forward-thinking content creators together with not only the world of book publishing, but also all the smart, savvy readers who want more from their favorite authors. Run by the staff of Touchstone Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, GLOMMABLE will give readers direct access to and original content from the internet personalities and authors that fans love most. With features including “Glom O’ The Week” (a weekly focused featured on our favorite internet personality), “Glomtacular” (a web celebrity’s pop culture diet), “Lit Wiz” (polls, book battles, quizzes, and more, all with a literary bent), and more, GLOMMABLE seeks to bring the worlds of self-published content and traditional book publishing together. GLOM ON.

 

Winner Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction 2015

0

secretThe Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction is co-sponsored by Pulitzer Prize winning author Harper Lee and the University of Alabama School of Law.

This year the prize has been awarded to Deborah Johnson for her novel, The Secret of Magic. Ms. Johnson is not only the first woman recipient of the award, she is also the first African-American author.

The award was created five years ago as a tribute to the 50th anniversary of publication of Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, and to honor Ms. Lee as a former alum of the University of Alabama. Past winners include; The Fifth Witness by Michael Connelly, Havana Requiem by Paul Goldstein and Sycamore Row by John Grisham.

The prize, authorized by Ms. Lee and co-sponsored by The University of Alabama School of Law and the ABA Journal, is given annually to a book-length work of fiction that best illuminates the role of lawyers in society and their power to effect change…The Secret of Magic was chosen by a distinguished panel of judges: Wayne Flynt, author and Alabama historian; Mary McDonagh Murphy, independent film and television writer and producer; and Michele Norris, NPR host and special correspondent.” From the prize committee’s press release. 

The award will be presented at September 3, at the Library of Congress National Book Festival at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C.

Five Careers For Graduates Who Love Reading

0

40144722_mAvid readers who cannot satiate their need to constantly read have five great career opportunities. Graduates with a serious love of reading, good grammar and English composition skills will find the following careers both pay well and satisfy their literary obsession.

Associate Editor

Most offline publishing companies hire associate editors who act as a secondary editor, reading proofed and edited manuscripts. They may also be required to provide additional editing comments and formatting changes before final review by the editor-in-chief. To acquire this position, it’s important to study the major publishing houses to determine the basic job requirements. Jobs as an associate editor can begin in a small publishing house where promotions from associate to editor do much to enhance a resume.

Proofreader

Any online or offline content or publishing company never has enough proofreaders. It’s a job for those for whom reading high quantities of literature is an art. In this position, punctuation, grammar, spelling and typo detection is crucial. The ability to hone proofreading techniques to speed up the proofreading process is highly desired.

Manuscript Readers

A manuscript reader differs from an associate editor in that the main duty of their job is to read the manuscript through to its final chapter. The manuscript reader than determines if the manuscripts meets all publishing standards and requirements. This is a job that means reading several manuscripts of varying volumes every day. If you love reading stories, plots and non-fiction, this is the job for you. The acceptance of authors’ work is wholly dependent on the manuscript reader who gives it a thumb’s up or thumb’s down before it ever reaches the eyes of an associate editor. That’s a lot of reading power in a graduate’s career.

Librarian

Even with the trend towards digitization, libraries still play an important role in the preservation and organization of information. A librarian who earned their Master’s in Library Science online says libraries remain important in the digital age because they are sources of material which either cannot be found elsewhere or exists outside the library without adequate context.

Professional, College and Student White Paper Readers

As a recent college grad who submitted a college paper or thesis, it’s easy to see how a career reading college papers could become a lucrative career. This also applies to high school students. Professionals who regularly submit technical papers need a keen eye to insure their work is ready for a government or corporate review.

_______________________________________________

Article submitted by Emma Sturgis

Emma is a freelance writer from Boston, MA. When not writing, she enjoys reading and rock climbing. Say hi on Twitter @EmmaSturgis2

The Modern Mughal Mentality by Afshan Naheed Hashmi Book Trailer

0

The Modern Mughal Mentality transforms hardships and difficulties into success stories by introducing the Jugaad Management Principle Business Model, which can be applied to any business, anywhere.
For the purpose of this book, the term Jugaad will be defined as obtaining your objectives by maximizing resources through thinking out of the box.
Following this new business model will inspire all types of companies around the world, no matter how big or small, to create innovative mentalities, products, and strategies. The Modern Mughal Mentality reveals ways in which companies everywhere can benefit from this new business model.
It also reveals ways in which western companies can learn to be successful in India. Executives of multi-national corporations, government officials, and even American and global small business owners who have no plans to do business in India will benefit from the innovative and revolutionary approach to maximizing resources that The Modern Mughal Mentality delivers. ISBN: 978-1-63192-931-1(’Paperback) eISBN: 978-1-48355-574-4 Find out more at http://www.afshanhashmi.com/ and http://www.drafshanhashmi.com/ #MughalMentality

SNEAK PEEK: Lady Beresford’s Lover by Ella Quinn

0

lady beresford's lover_ebookLady Beresford’s Lover by Ella Quinn

Ella Quinn’s bachelors are quite sure of what they want in life—and love—until the right woman opens their eyes…

After a painful heartbreak, Rupert, the handsome young Earl of Stanstead, has decided that when it comes to love, avoidance is best. Until he meets a woman who makes him forget his plan—and remember his longing for a wife and family. Yet he senses that she too has been hurt, though she attempts to hide her feelings—and more—in the most baffling and alluring way. Intrigued, Rupert is willing to play along, if winning her is the prize…

Crushed by her late husband’s scorn, Vivian, Countess of Beresford, believes she is monstrously undesirable. Sadly childless, she has moved to London resigned to a solitary life. Still, when she encounters Rupert at a masquerade ball, her disguise as Cleopatra emboldens her. Convinced he doesn’t recognize her, she begins an after-hours affair with him, always in costume—while allowing him to innocently court the real her by day. But when Rupert makes a shocking choice, will Vivian be able to handle the truth?…

EXCERPT:

This is the first meeting between my hero, Rupert, Earl of Stanstead, and my heroine, Vivian, the widowed Countess of Beresford.

He sucked in a breath. One of the women wore a pale, almost ice-blue gown. Her curls were silvery, much like he’d imagined the color of the snow maiden’s hair in a fairy tale his mother had read to him. When the lady glanced at him he could see her eyes were of the same deep blue as the trim on her gown, and the color of the deeper waters he’d seen in the Mediterranean Sea. Not in her first blush of youth, her cheeks were no longer plump. But not that old, perhaps close to his age. She had turned her head toward her neighbor, and her determined chin firmed. God, she was even more beautiful than he’d imagined. Who was she? Rupert was quite sure he’d never seen her before.

He gave himself a shake. Standing there like an idiot wouldn’t do him any good at all. He’d never been shy about meeting a lady, yet he couldn’t stop himself from staring at her. What would happen when they were introduced? Would she be as fascinated by him as he was by her?

He prayed she wasn’t married.

Vivian had the strangest sensation she was being watched. She glanced up and fought to control her countenance. It was him! The gentleman from the park. She was sure of it, and he was staring at her. Their gazes met, and he held hers as he strode forward, apparently not seeing either the footmen who darted out of his way or the other guests attempting to draw his attention.

He was taller than she’d thought, had a strong face with lean cheeks and strong bones. His aristocratic nose was blade straight, reminding her of an ancient Greek or Roman. He carried himself with ease, as if he was the master of his life and the world around him. At first he appeared to be in his early thirties, but when he came closer, she could see no lines bracketing his well-defined lips or marring his smooth brow. The gentleman appeared good-natured, as if a grin hovered permanently around his mouth. In time, she imagined his eyes would have smile lines.

When he reached her small coterie he bowed to Phoebe. “My lady, always a pleasure to see you again.”

Phoebe smiled at him. “You will soon rival Kit and Robert in your address, my lord.”

Vivian did not know who Kit was, but the only Robert she had been introduced to was Lord Beaumont. The grin Vivian had known was not far away graced the gentleman’s lips. “Ah, Featherton is the standard to which all gentlemen aspire. I am a mere pretender to his throne.” The man’s gray eyes twinkled. “As for my cousin, I trust I have surpassed his address already.”

He did resemble Lord Beaumont to a large degree. Both gentlemen had classic good looks, but this man appeared—Vivian searched her mind for the word . . . vital. He had an energy about him she did not see in most gentlemen of the ton. Even young men, such as he must be, contrived to appear fashionably bored.

“Please introduce me to your friends, my lady,” he said to Phoebe as he glanced at Vivian.

About the Author:
Ella QuinnBestselling author Ella Quinn’s studies and other jobs have always been on the serious side. Reading historical romances, especially Regencies, were her escape. Eventually her love of historical novels led her to start writing them. She has just finished her first series, The Marriage Game, and her new series will start in April 2016.

She is married to her wonderful husband of over thirty years. They have a son and granddaughter, one cat and a dog. After living in the South Pacific, Central America, North Africa, England and Europe, she and her husband decided to make their dreams come true and are now living on a sailboat cruising the Caribbean and North America.

Ella is a member of the Romance Writers of American, The Beau Monde and Hearts Through History. She is represented by Elizabeth Pomada of Larsen-Pomada Literary Agency, and published by Kensington.

You can purchase LADY BERESFORD’S LOVER at:
Amazon
Barnes & Noble

You can find Ella Quinn online at:
Website
Facebook
Twitter
Blog

SNEAK PEEK: Welcome to Fat Chance Texas by Celia Bonaduce

0

Fat Chance - Celia BonaduceWelcome to Fat Chance, Texas! by Celia Bonaduce!

For champion professional knitter Dymphna Pearl, inheriting part of a sun-blasted ghost town in the Texas hill country isn’t just unexpected, it’s a little daunting. To earn a cash bequest that could change her life, she’ll have to leave California to live in tiny, run-down Fat Chance for six months—with seven strangers. Impossible! Or is it?

Trading her sandals for cowboy boots, Dymphna dives into her new life with equal parts anxiety and excitement. After all, she’s never felt quite at home in Santa Monica anyway. Maybe Fat Chance will be her second chance. But making it habitable is going take more than a lasso and Wild West spirit. With an opinionated buzzard overlooking the proceedings and mismatched strangers learning to become friends, Dymphna wonders if unlocking the secrets of her own heart is the way to strike real gold…

EXCERPT FROM WELCOME TO FAT CHANCE, TEXAS

             Blanche and Earrings were Dymphna’s two least sociable rabbits. They had just hopped around the rabbit-run – a large section of the yard given over to exercising the angoras – when Erinn arrived with the mail. Because Dymphna lived in the guesthouse, she didn’t have her own address, so they shared a mailbox. Dymphna had offered to get a P.O. box. It always made Dymphna slightly uncomfortable that Erinn, who owned the beautiful main house, always delivered Dymphna’s mail to the backyard. But Dymphna rarely had to feel awkward – she got very few deliveries, other than “Rabbits Quarterly.”

“You have a letter,” Erinn said, walking across her own back porch and down the steps into the yard.  “Very good stationary, too.”

Dymphna finished locking the rabbits’ pens and brushed her hands over her jeans before taking the envelope.

“How do you know it’s good stationary?” Dymphna asked. “Is it like thread count?”

Dymphna’s knowledge of fiber was often her gauge for comparison.

“All writers can instinctively rate stationary,” Erinn said. “It’s a gift.”

Dymphna could never tell when Erinn was joking, so she nodded and took the letter.  It was from “The Law Office of Wesley J. Tensaw”. She stared down at it and frowned.

“Why would I be getting a letter from a law office?” Dymphna asked.

“As Carl Jung once said, ‘Often the hands will solve a problem that the intellect has struggled with in vain.’.”

“Meaning?”

“Meaning…Open the letter.”

Dymphna looked up and saw that Erinn had taken a seat on the top step of the porch.

“All writers instinctively want to know what’s in someone else’s mail,” Erinn said. “It’s a curse.”

Dymphna opened the letter carefully. She didn’t want Erinn to think she was not respectful of good stationary. She read every line over three times, trying to process it.  Without a word, she handed the letter to Erinn who read:

The Law Office Of Wesley J. Tensaw
43298 Avenue of the American Stars
Los Angeles, CA  90067
888-555-1212

 Ms. Dymphna Pearl
612 Ocean Avenue
Santa Monica, CA 90402

Dear Ms. Pearl,

This office represents the executor of the Estate of a prominent, internationally known client.  The testator instructed that his Will cannot be read unless you, among others, are present. Until the reading I am not at liberty to discuss either his identity or any other provision of the Will – except to note that it would be particularly against your interest to mention the reading or to show this letter to the press. Please call Ms. Rhonda Kimberly at the phone number above to confirm that you will attend the reading at 10:00 am on Tuesday, August 12.  Ms. Kimberly will give you the address (which must also remain confidential). I look forward to meeting you.

Very truly yours,
Wesley J. Tensaw

“Do you think it’s real?” Dymphna asked.

“Well, Wesley Tensaw is definitely real. A heavy hitter in the legal community,” Erinn replied. At Dymphna’s astonished look, she confessed, “I Goggled Tensaw when I saw the envelope. I told you, it’s a curse.”

Dymphna arrived at the Beverly Park Circle address at 9:48 on the appointed morning.  Erinn was insistent that Dymphna attend the reading.

“Think of it as an adventure,” Erinn said.

“I’m not really a huge fan of adventure,” Dymphna had replied.

“Don’t be silly,’ Erinn had said. “Anybody who hates adventure does not raise rabbits for a living.”

Erinn had a way of making Dymphna feel much more interesting than she found herself on a daily basis. So there she stood, across the street from the gates behind which twisted a long driveway lined with palm trees. She’d parked across the street from the intimidating drive. She looked down at her brown skirt to make sure there was no rabbit hair sticking to it. She also wore a white blouse with billowy sleeves and a brown cloche hat she’d knitted the night before. She always felt more secure – more grounded -when she was wearing something she’d created from the fur of one of her rabbits.  She wasn’t sure how you dressed to meet anyone involved with a prominent, internationally known person, but these were the best clothes she had. Mr. Tensaw’s secretary gave her no information other than the address and another warning not to speak to the press. Was she meeting his family?  Why weren’t they meeting in an office?  The longer she stood, the more questions she had.

About the Author:
celiaCelia Bonaduce is a producer on HGTV’s House Hunters. She is the author of the Venice Beach Romances and lives in Santa Monica, CA, with her husband in a beautiful, “no-pets” building. She wishes she could say she has a dog. You can contact Celia at www.celiabonaduce.com.

 

 

 

You can purchase WELCOME TO FAT CHANCE, TEXAS at:
Amazon
Apple
Google Play
Kobo
Nook

Find Celia on line at:
Twitter
Facebook

Five Dogs Who Give New Meaning to Man’s Best Friend

0

Wendy Holden knows all about man’s best friend. Her childhood pets included a Labrador, a Corgi, and a rescued Staffordshire bull terrier with appalling breath. Once she grew up with a home of her own, she acquired two Labs and two English Springer Spaniels, all of whom lived to ripe old age. All she owns now is a 17-year-old rescued Jack Russell but she’s on the lookout for a puppy and another rescue dog later this year.

When she first came across the story of how an Anatolian shepherd who’d been abused and crippled formed an unbreakable bond with the disabled boy whose family had rescued him, she was deeply touched once more by the enduring connection that exists between humans and animals. She captured their healing relationship in the bookHaatchi & Little B, now out in paperback. Here Holden shares the stories of five of her favorite dogs from truth and fiction whose friendships with their owners have gone way beyond the norm.

Reader beware, spoilers ahead:

1) Hachiko
 
Haatchi was named by his charity rescuers after Hachikō, a purebred Japanese Akita, because of their shared connection with a railway line. The dog known as Hachi was so devoted to his master that he waited every night at the train station for him for return home from work. One day, his master died and never came home. For the next 11 years until his death, Hachi arrived at the station at precisely the hour of his master’s train and waited for him in vain. Commuters who saw him night after night befriended him and before long news of his unstinting loyalty spread and Hachi became a source of national pride. A statue of him was erected in his honor at the station and the spot where he waited is marked with bronze paw prints. When Hachi eventually died—still patiently waiting for his master—his body was stuffed and mounted for display. Thousands queued to see it. The expression, “Meet you at Hachiko” would still be understood by most residents of Tokyo.

2) Buck
call of the wild
The dog hero of The Call of the Wild, a 1903 novel by Jack London, Buck is a huge St. Bernard-Collie cross who is stolen, sold, and sent to the Yukon where he is beaten, abused, and added to a pack of wild dogs to pull sleds through hostile territories. Having been domesticated his whole life, he has to learn how to survive the brutal conditions and the pack mentality. Facing daily disappointment and the frequent risk of death, he loses his attachment to and dependence upon man and learns to take care of himself. Then an outdoorsman called John comes into his life, saves him from a grisly end, nurses him back to health, and restores his faith in humankind. Their bond is deep and pure, and, in return for John’s kindness, Buck helps his master secure his future. That is, until he leaves the camp one day to socialize with wolves and returns to find John murdered by natives. Avenging his master’s death, Buck kills the natives and then returns to the wilderness that had lured him away. Each year, on the anniversary of John’s death, Buck returns to the camp as a ghost dog to howl his grief.

3) Uggie
Uggie The Dog with Berenice Bejo
The tiny Jack Russell who stole the limelight in the silent Oscar-winning movie The Artist, is as loyal to his trainer in real life as he was to his hapless actor owner in the movie. Rescued from a California pound, young Uggie showed such early promise as a star to his owner, animal trainer Omar von Muller, that he went on to enjoy a movie career spanning several years. In his twilight years he was picked for one of the greatest dog roles ever: the loyal pet of the silent movie star played by French actor Jean Dujardin. In The Artist, Dujardin falls out of favor when “talkies” come in and he loses his wife, his career, and all of his money. Uggie remains loyally by his side and saves his life when, suicidal, he tries to kill himself. Uggie’s performance created a global sensation, and he went on to win numerous awards of his own. He “barked” his own memoir, went on a world book tour, and even performs tricks in an app. Elderly and retired now, he still lives with Von Muller and his family and has never forgotten the kindness of the trainer who knows that their unique bond will survive his passing.

4) Greyfriars Bobby
Greyfriars-bobby-edin
Bobby was a two-year-old Skye terrier owned and loved by an Edinburgh police officer and night watchman, John Gray, in the middle of the 19th century. When Gray died and was buried in Greyfriars Kirkyard, the story goes that Bobby sat on his master’s grave and refused to leave until his own death fourteen years later. He became known as “the most faithful dog in the world.” So loved and admired was the loyal little creature that he was given a licence and a collar by the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, who was also a director of the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. When Bobby finally passed away in 1872, he was buried in the same graveyard as his master. His headstone is now on the tourist trail and visitors often leave sticks and balls for him to “chase in heaven.” A statue and a drinking fountain (with a lower fountain for dogs) were later built in honor of his “affectionate fidelity” at the graveyard gates and numerous books and films have been written about his life and his loyalty.

5) Rip
ripdog
A scruffy little mixed breed terrier who hadn’t eaten in days, Rip was discovered roaming the bombed streets of London by an air raid warden during the London Blitz in 1940. Most orphaned or stray dogs were rounded up and killed at the time, but the pair struck up a friendship and Rip was adopted as the mascot of the warden’s patrol group. Refusing to leave the side of his new master, Rip went with him on each of his patrols and began to work as an unofficial rescue dog—alerting firemen and ambulance crews to casualties trapped under rubble or in bombed-out buildings. Although dogs had been used in the First World War for carrying first aid and as messengers, and have also been vital in rescuing people trapped in avalanches in the Alps for centuries, few animals had ever proved themselves brave enough to remain in a place of extreme danger with fire and smoke, explosions, and unexpected noises. Rip had never been trained, but he rescued more than a hundred victims of the raids and his track record led to other search and rescue dogs being trained up for the same kind of work. In 1945, he was awarded the special Dickin Medal for bravery and he wore it on his collar until the day he died. In 2013, Rip became the inspiration for a novella by Taylor Holden about a dog caught up in the Blitz entitled Mr. Scraps.

Wendy Holden’s first novel, The Sense of Paper, was published by Random House, New York, in 2006 to widespread critical acclaim. Other works have included the best-selling novelization of the award-winning films The Full Monty, plusShell Shock – an investigation into PTSD from the First World War. She lives on a farm in Suffolk, England, with her husband and two dogs.

 

REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM BOOKISH.COM