Bark magazine calls Gracie ‘inspiring’
This review appears in Bark’s April/May issue. Thank you, Bark, for that thumbs up!
Saving Gracie
By Carol Bradley
Wiley & Sons, 256 pp., 2010; $21.99
Reviewed by Susan Tasaki
EVEN THE WORDS MAKE those WHO
love dogs cringe: puppy mills, places
where living, breathing creatures are
treated like machines, where adult female
dogs give birth to litter after litter of
pups who will be sold
through pet stores or to
unsuspecting consumers.
What happens when
their breeding days are
over?
If they’re exceptionally
fortunate, they share Gracie’s
experience: rescue, rehabilitation and
adoption. In Saving Gracie, Bradley
chronicles the story of a tiny Cavalier
King Charles Spaniel who was
removed-along with more than 300
other small-breed dogs, both adults
and puppies-from a ghastly kennel
operation by the Chester
County (Pa.) SPCA in 2006.
Known first as Dog 132, then
Wilma, and finally Gracie, the
six-year-old was born in and
confined to a crate her entire
life. She had multiple and persistent
health problems but, of
more concern, she was emotionally
shut down; rescuers wondered
if she’d ever recover.
Bradley profiles all the players in
this drama, among them, the CCSPCA
humane police officers who initiated
the rescue; the shelter workers and volunteers
who tirelessly fed, bathed and
cared for the dogs; the attorneys who
tried the case against the kennel owners;
and even the kennel owners themselves.
Set within this account is another
touching story, that of Linda Jackson,
the woman who eventually adopted
Gracie. Jackson had always liked animals-
cats more than dogs, truth be
told-but this adoption galvanized
her. She became passionate about not
only saving and improving Gracie’s life,
but also the lives of puppy mill dogs
everywhere.
It’s impossible to read this book without
being moved; the picture it paints of
both puppy mill conditions and what
they do to the dogs who are unfortunate
enough to be confined to them is grim,
though presented in a non-sensational
way. On the other hand, those who
advocate for the dogs are utterly inspiring.
And the best part is, for Gracie, the
story has a happy ending.