cover image Mutual Rescue: How Adopting a Homeless Animal Can Save You, Too

Mutual Rescue: How Adopting a Homeless Animal Can Save You, Too

Carol Novello, with Ginny Graves. Grand Central, $27 (272p) ISBN 978-1-5387-1353-2

The premise put forward by Novello, president of Humane Society Silicon Valley, in her first book is a simple one: rescuing a pet from a shelter helps both the animal and the owner in numerous ways. This collection of anecdotes, bolstered by the requisite statistics and studies, proves her point time and again. Novello opens with the story of how two Parkland School shooting survivors found solace in a pair of rescue dogs, one a mini Australian shepherd trained as a therapy animal, the other a puppy (of an unspecified breed) recently rescued from an abusive home; both were powerfully effective in helping their owners recuperate from trauma. While not all of Novello’s accounts are this dramatic, they’re equally impactful, variously showing how animals can help owners overcome the loss of a child or the suicide of a loved one, combat mental illness, adopt a healthier lifestyle, and even enhance a child’s cognitive and emotional development. A selection of resources, such as volunteering tips for people unable to commit to pet ownership, rounds out the book. It’s an impressive and inspiring work guaranteed to spur a visit to a rescue web site or trip to the local Humane Society. Agent: Bonnie Solow, Solow Literary Enterprises, Inc. (Apr.)