cover image Shaggy Muses: The Dogs Who Inspired Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Emily Bront, Emily Dickinson, Edith Wharton, and Virginia Woolf

Shaggy Muses: The Dogs Who Inspired Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Emily Bront, Emily Dickinson, Edith Wharton, and Virginia Woolf

Maureen Adams, . . Ballantine, $24.95 (299pp) ISBN 978-0-345-48406-2

Coaxed through a depression by her golden retriever, Adams, a psychologist and former English professor, was drawn to five exceptional women writers who relied on their loyal dogs for emotional support. Flush distracted Elizabeth Barrett after her favorite brother's death, and the poet wrote about “the unsettling similarity between lapdogs and women in Victorian England”: both powerless and needing to please others. Formidable, eccentric Emily Brontë, who once savagely beat her fierce mastiff, Keeper, for sleeping on her bed, refused to sentimentalize the human-dog bond in Wuthering Heights, which depicts innocent pets being hung. Carlo, a Newfoundland, comforted Emily Dickinson in a dark time—when she may have been in love with a married man—and Edith Wharton mourned the death of one of her pooches more than the death of her mother. And Adams suggests that Virginia Woolf, depicting a dog's trauma in her biography of Flush, who was dognapped for ransom, dealt with her own childhood molestation (a picture of Woolf's dog, Pinka, appeared on the cover of Flush's biography). Although Adams's knowledgeable minibiographies are necessarily skewed toward a specialized subject matter, lovers of both dogs and classic writers will identify with this sweet, quirky book. Illus. (July 31)