cover image Dog Boy

Dog Boy

Eva Hornung, . . Viking, $25.95 (293pp) ISBN 978-0-670-02149-9

This gritty, richly imagined tale of an abandoned boy in a Moscow shantytown who comes to live with a pack of feral dogs more than lives up to its unlikely premise. Hornung (Fire, Fire , etc., written as Eva Sallis) tracks young Romochka’s growth over two difficult years from a four-year-old whelp to a taut, street-smart alpha dog. The boy’s evolution from tolerated outsider to trusted leader of this canine crew is believably portrayed, and Hornung capably draws a tawdry world of trash-pickers, beggars, and occasional friends. As he grows, so does his curiosity about the world of humans he has fled, leading to an inevitable collision when Romochka is captured by a scientist who wants to use him to further his career. Hornung knows how to wring emotion from a scene, making the bond between boy and dog deeply felt, while rarely running afoul of sentimentality. In her hands, this engrossing story becomes both an investigation into humanity and a vivid portrait of one of Russia’s millions of lost children. (Mar.)