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Obedience Training

How to Be Your Dog's Best Friend: The Classic Training Manual for Dog Owners (Revised & Updated Edition)

How to Be Your Dog's Best Friend: The Classic Training Manual for Dog Owners (Revised & Updated Edition)

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Author: The Monks Of New Skete
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Category: Book

List Price: $25.99
Buy New: $13.93
You Save: $12.06 (46%)

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New (41) Used (25) Collectible (2) from $11.94

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 155 reviews
Sales Rank: 7456

Media: Hardcover
Edition: Rev Upd
Pages: 256
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.3

ISBN: 0316610003
Dewey Decimal Number: 636.70887
EAN: 9780316610001
ASIN: 0316610003

Publication Date: September 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new Book, ALL days Low Price !

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 51-55 of 155



5 out of 5 stars Best dog book..   September 7, 2005
Donald P. Smith (Ft. Lauderdale)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book, "How to Be Your Dog's Best Friend", is not just a great training book, but it is a great understanding book. It helps one to understand the mind and soul of a dog. It allows the person and the dog to get closer to each other and nourish the needs of each other. I surly would recommend this to not only dog owner and prospective dog owners, but also to people who want to gain an better understanding of themselves.My hat is off to the Monks.


5 out of 5 stars This book helped me find 2 great friends   August 28, 2005
Christopher J. Deasy (Depends on the time of year)
13 out of 15 found this review helpful

The Monks have done it again... they helped me raise my puppies (The Art of Rasing a Puppy) and now they've held my hand for the rest of the journey. I have 2 dogs that I can say are NOW my best friends... read this book and you'll definitely be on your way to some well-deserved face licks!

2 major points: this book is very applicable and easy to read... you can continue to go back to it as a reference any time.

***Some of you may be concerned about a few reviews that take the monks out of context... One reviewer wrote "if he/she isn't yelping, you aren't stiking it hard enough"... this quote refers to EXTREME situations, such as biting a person or attacking another dog. They also tell you how to 'properly' implore this method. You can even ignore this short part of the book (if you come from the camp that feels it is never ok to strike a dog). It is also worthwhile to comment that the monks deal with a large, tough breed (German Shepherds); it is therefore VERY dangerous to use an "alpha roll" (executed by rolling the dog on its back standing over the dog... I would not suggest anyone do this with a large dog!!). Like I said, you can leave this advice out of your actual training without a problem... I can understand the arguments from both sides, and prefer not to strike my dogs at all, but I have also worked with aggresive dogs at the Phoenix, AZ dog shelter where the monk's methods made the difference between putting a dog "to sleep" and getting a great dog (ussually abused- no fault of its own) to a thankful and loving home.



5 out of 5 stars How to Be Your Dog's Best Friend   August 16, 2005
Horsty (San Rafael, CA USA)
1 out of 6 found this review helpful

The best Book Ihave read about German Shephards


1 out of 5 stars How to Be Your Dog's Worst Enemy   August 10, 2005
Lee Charles Kelley (New York City)
16 out of 47 found this review helpful


One quote says it all. When the monks ask how hard you should hit your dog (that's right -- how hard should you hit your dog?), they reply, "IF SHE DOESN'T YELP IN PAIN YOU HAVEN'T HIT HER HARD ENOUGH." (pg. 44, original edition) That's all you and your dog need to know. And while there may be some valid information in this book, it doesn't amount to anything you can't find in many other books on the subject--books that don't recommend you hit your dog till she yelps in pain. The kind of mentality that could even remotely consider hitting a dog in order to discipline it for ANYTHING simply can't be trusted, and should qualify this as one of the worst books on dog training ever written.

As far as solving behavioral problems is concerned, most of them, including aggression, are caused by mistreatment in the first place. So how does further mistreatment help an already distressed animal learn? Of course if you still believe in the now discredited alpha theory*, then perhaps this Draconian approach makes sense to you. But since the alpha theory has been proven false*, physical discipline of this type ends up just being stupid, mean, harmful, and--though I hate to say it--slightly insane. There ARE better, much kinder, and more humane ways to deal with problem dogs (and I don't mean drugs or behavioral "science" techniques).

My recommendation for a dog training manual? Either PLAY TRAINING YOUR DOG by Patricia Gail Burnham, or NATURAL DOG TRAINING by Kevin Behan. Or both.

*(Top wolf experts don't even like to use the word alpha anymore because, as Dr. L. David Mech puts it, "it falsely implies a hierarchical system in which each wolf assumes a place in a linear pecking order." (Canadian Journal of Zoology, 2002) Translation: there is no hierarchy in wolf packs, which puts the lie to the monks' entire approach to canine behavior and training.)



5 out of 5 stars Awesome Book   July 11, 2005
way2late (Truckee, CA)
3 out of 6 found this review helpful

The Monks of New Skeet really know what they are talking about. No one should get a puppy without reading a book from them first. I would recommend it to any dog owner, not just someone with getting a puppy.

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