A Small Furry Prayer by Steven Kotler
LAP OF LOVE: Life at Rancho de Chihuahua. (Photo: Bloomsbury USA)
Going by the sulky Chihuahua on its cover, one might expect to find Steven Kotler’s book "A Small Furry Prayer" on
a shelf beside the likes of John Grogan’s "Marley and Me," but this is
no lighthearted tale about a dog with a heart of gold.
LAP OF LOVE: Life at Rancho de Chihuahua. (Photo: Bloomsbury USA)
Reading Kotler is like having a drink (or three, or five) with an
old friend — only this friend is particularly interesting, more than
willing to admit his faults and failures, has a sharp eye and an even
sharper tongue, and has done loads of research on topics ranging from
neuroscience to shamanism.
The story begins when Kotler and his girlfriend, fellow writer and
dedicated dog rescuer Joy Nicholson, are given less than a month to
vacate the small Los Angeles home they’d been living in with eight
rescued dogs. With very little money and a serious need for space,
Kotler spontaneously decides to buy a tiny farm in Chimayo, N.M. — a
home “chosen because of its distance from, not proximity to,
civilization,” and which turns out to boast a 60 percent poverty rate
and a serious black tar heroin problem.
The idea is to start “a real rescue,” as Nicholson, who becomes
Kotler’s wife along the way, puts it. Upon
arriving at their new home in Chimayo, Kotler and Nicholson are met with
an extremely distraught donkey, a May snowfall and a drug bust.
The couple call their fledgling rescue Rancho de Chihuahua, and
soon it’s time to start pulling dogs from the local shelter, but while
Nicholson begins visiting and volunteering there immediately, Kotler
falters: “I wanted nothing to do with the place. Or anyplace like it.
Shelters scared me. In hindsight, I think it was fear of empathy, of
feeling too much, of the level of commitment that might come from
feeling too much, keeping me away.”
It’s this terrifying feeling of empathy — which Kotler eventually
walks headlong into and, for better or for worse, fully embraces — that
drives his earnest inquiries into a host of subjects ranging from
spirituality and philosophy to neuroscience and deep ecology, all with
the goal of understanding the ancient, complex and essential
relationship between humans and other animals — especially dogs.
As Kotler thoughtfully explores the canine-human relationship
across thousands of years and through various lenses, we meet a host of
colorful characters. Some of them are human, like Doc, who for the past
25 years has run the Cottonwood Veterinary Clinic and the New Mexico
Wildlife Center, both with the goal of “helping any injured animal that
comes in the door.” Really, though, the characters in this story are the
dogs.
There’s Igor, the bull terrier with epilepsy, described as “a lot
like a steam shovel on PCP,” and Gidget, a 2-pound dancing Chihuahua
with demodectic mange.
“Her coat was destroyed, her eyes bulging out, her brain not quite
right. Maybe it was the mange, maybe she was a few spoons shy of a place
setting, maybe she just felt the funk — whatever the reason — the dog
had to dance.”
There’s Stilts, “standing about two feet high, with the torso of an
armadillo, the legs of a giraffe,” which gave him the appearance of “a
stilt-walking hobbit with an eating disorder.” And Bucket, who is “maybe
part pit bull and maybe part hellhound and shaped like a blacksmith’s
anvil, with a face that’s unmistakable Calvin Coolidge.”
Before long, Rancho de Chihuahua is home to upwards of fifty dogs,
and Kotler finds himself looking for creative ways to both care for and
understand them.
“Each archaic religion in history was built around animals — but
why were they sure animals were sacred? And why do so many of us still
consider animals sacred?”
Each question he asks and each discovery he makes spring from his
own personal experiences living with, loving and rehabilitating these
dogs. Kotler’s stories are infused with the wisdom found in the writings
of mystics, philosophers and animal scientists such as St. Francis,
René Descartes, Claude Levi-Strauss and Elizabeth Hess, and what he
learns along the way is amazing to the point of being
paradigm-shifting.
There’s no sap here, but Kotler’s honest, heartfelt stories will have you laughing through your tears. This book is a must-read.
- Reviewed by Helen Jupiter
- Reviewed by Helen Jupiter
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