Never leave the dogs behind A memoir

Brianna Madia

Book - 2024

"The author of the New York Times bestseller Nowhere for Very Long continues her story with this deeply honest, moving account of a woman walking the line between independence and isolation when she moves to the Southwest desert with nothing and no one but her four dogs"--

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Subjects
Genres
autobiographies (literary works)
Autobiographies
Travel writing
Published
New York : HarperOne [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Brianna Madia (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
190 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780063316096
  • Chapter 1. The Rounds
  • Chapter 2. The Girl Who Hit Her Dog
  • Chapter 3. Never-Never Land
  • Chapter 4. Manic
  • Chapter 5. The Bite Mark
  • Chapter 6. The Nosebleed
  • Chapter 7. Two-Hundred-Dollar Bill
  • Chapter 8. 840 Feet
  • Chapter 9. The Deck
  • Chapter 10. The Half-Wolves
  • Chapter 11. Routine
  • Chapter 12. Wall Street
  • Chapter 13. The Shed
  • Chapter 14. Politician's Think Tank
  • Chapter 15. Baja
  • Chapter 16. The Beach
  • Chapter 17. The Will
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The author of Nowhere for Very Long returns with a tale about how solitude and dogs can heal wounds. Madia moved to the desert outside Moab, Utah, in May 2020, fleeing from the pain of leaving her husband and a vicious barrage of online harassment. She writes, "A handful of people would make dozens and dozens of anonymous accounts to send what amounted to hundreds of messages" berating her for the breakup and even the accident that almost killed their dog. "People claimed to know things about me, about my life," she continues. "Even if they knew nothing, the internet still provided them the perfect place to pretend they did." She responded by taking refuge in a used van with a vista of "the smoldering ashes of all the bridges I'd burned while I, myself, had been on fire." As in her previous memoir, Madia recounts in raw detail her depression, mania, guilt, anger, and struggle to survive, emotionally and physically. She was not really alone, however. Besides two pet pythons, she lived with four rambunctious dogs. "Sometimes," she admits, "I forgot I wasn't a dog until other people were around." Her life felt chaotic: "I was drinking myself to sleep, starving myself to a silhouette, and living in a relative state of squalor simply because it felt like that's what I deserved." Blaming herself for her husband's alcoholism and the failure of their marriage "had become a form of survival. If everything was my fault, that meant I had some sort of control over it…that meant I could make sense of it, fix it, never let it happen again." Gradually, Madia came to see that she could take care of herself and become someone "who could learn to forgive herself for those times when she didn't know how." An intimate memoir of shattering pain. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.