Dog Man, Martha Sherrill
Dog Man, Martha Sherrill
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Dog Man
An Uncommon Life on a Faraway Mountain

Author: Martha Sherrill

Narrator: Laural Merlington

Unabridged: 6 hr 18 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/02/2008


Synopsis

As Dog Man opens, Martha Sherrill brings us to a world that Americans know very little about—the snow country of Japan during World War II. In a mountain village, we meet Morie Sawataishi, a fierce individualist who has chosen to break the law by keeping an Akita dog hidden in a shed on his property.

During the war, the magnificent and intensely loyal Japanese hunting dogs are donated to help the war effort, eaten, or used to make fur vests for the military. By the time of the Japanese surrender in 1945, there are only sixteen Akitas left in the country. The survival of the breed becomes Morie's passion and life, almost a spiritual calling.

Devoted to the dogs, Morie is forever changed. His life becomes radically unconventional—almost preposterous—in ultra-ambitious, conformist Japan. For the dogs, Morie passes up promotions, bigger houses, and prestigious engineering jobs in Tokyo. Instead, he raises a family with his young wife, Kitako—a sheltered urban sophisticate—in Japan's remote and forbidding snow country.

Their village is isolated, but interesting characters are always dropping by—dog buddies, in-laws from Tokyo, and a barefoot hunter who lives in the wild. Due in part to Morie's perseverance and passion, the Akita breed strengthens and becomes wildly popular, sometimes selling for millions of yen. Yet Morie won't sell his spectacular dogs. He only likes to give them away.

Morie and Kitako remain in the snow country today, living in the traditional Japanese cottage they designed together more than thirty years ago—with tatami mats, an overhanging roof, a deep bathtub, and no central heat. At ninety-four years old, Morie still raises and trains the Akita dogs that have come to symbolize his life.

In beautiful prose that is a joy to read, Sherrill opens up the world of the Dog Man and his wife, providing a profound look at what it is to be an individualist in a culture that reveres conformity—and what it means to live life in one's own way—while expertly revealing Japan and Japanese culture as we've never seen it before.

About Martha Sherrill

Martha Sherrill is a former Washington Post staff writer who specializes in penetrating profiles of difficult subjects. Her award-winning writing has appeared in Esquire and Vanity Fair, among other publications. She is the author of The Buddha from Brooklyn, a work of nonfiction, and the novels My Last Movie Star and The Ruins of California.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Carrie on March 25, 2008

This book is about a very rare subject that I happen to love and have never really found in another book--I felt like I'd discovered treasure. Many of the dog breeds we know today were created or heavily influenced by one or two eccentric, dedicated people. Usually, not much is known about them othe......more

Goodreads review by Terry on February 01, 2009

Somewhere in chapter three, I almost put this book down. Actually, I almost threw it across the room. The style was grating--the author seemed to end every few paragraphs with an epiphany that was as subtle as an anchor; the characters were stereotypes; the language and the over-riding theme--modern......more

Goodreads review by Sandra D on April 14, 2008

Beautifully-told story of a Japanese couple who were instrumental in rescuing the Akita from near-extinction, with interesting details of rural life in post-war Japan.......more

Goodreads review by Chana on November 27, 2017

Quite a fine book. Morie and Kitako marry shortly after Morie finishes his service in WWII, but they are very different people; she is a Tokyo girl, he is from the snow country. He brings his new bride first to Manchuria and then to the snow country. They live without electricity, hot water or any a......more

Goodreads review by Snowlady on June 16, 2020

Being part Japanese and having lived in the country on and off for 20 years, I found this book enlightening as I learned something new about my beloved Japan. I had no idea Akita's were almost extinct after WWII and did not know about life in the North of Japan. My only wish was for the author to go......more