Golden Retriever Dog Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Golden Retriever Dog. Here they are! All 100 of them:

The face of a golden retriever feels like home.
David Rosenfelt (Dogtripping: 25 Rescues, 11 Volunteers, and 3 RVs on Our Canine Cross-Country Adventure)
Golden retrievers are not bred to be guard dogs, and considering the size of their hearts and their irrepressible joy in life, they are less likely to bite than to bark, less likely to bark than to lick a hand in greeting. In spite of their size, they think they are lap dogs, and in spite of being dogs, they think they are also human, and nearly every human they meet is judged to have the potential to be a boon companion who might, at many moment, cry, "Let's go!" and lead them on a great adventure.
Dean Koontz
The dogs brought it all back to, you know, to the human side.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
When he lay beside me with his dog-breath sighs, it was if he was saying, Give me your sadness. I will take it, as much as you need. If it kills us both, so be it. I am here.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
If Levi were a dog, he'd be a golden retriever. If he were a game, he'd be a Ping-Pong, incessant and bouncing and light.
Rainbow Rowell (Fangirl)
Good dog," Nick said. "That's one of the tricks I've taught him, shaking water on girls so they back into my arms." "Really! How smart of Rocky - and you, of course." "That's another thing I've been wanting to tell you," he said, turning me to face him. "I'm tired of getting jealous of my dog. I mean, he has nice eyes, but so do I." I looked from Rocky's golden eyes to Nick's laughing green ones. "I didn't enjoy the way Rocky got to stick close to you while I played Holly's boyfriend. He's going to have some competition from now on." "Oh, yeah? Are you good at retrieving sticks?" "I'm good at stealing kisses," Nick said, then proved it.
Elizabeth Chandler (Dark Secrets 1 (Dark Secrets, #1-2))
That's the moment when Tuesday, after all his caution, stopped being just my service dog, and my emotional support, and my conversation piece. That's when he became my friend.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
Charlotte: Giordano is terribly afraid Gwyneth will get everything wrong tomorrow that she can get wrong. Gideon: Pass the olive oil, please. Charlotte: Politics and history are a closed book to Gwyneth. She can’t even remember names—they go in at one ear and straight out of the other. She can’t help it, her brain doesn’t have the capacity. It’s stuffed with the names of boy bands and long, long cast lists of actors in soppy romantic films. Raphael: Gwyneth is your time-traveling cousin, right? I saw her yesterday in school. Isn’t she the one with long dark hair and blue eyes? Charlotte: Yes, and that birthmark on her temple, the one that looks like a little banana. Gideon: Like a little crescent moon. Raphael: What’s that friend of hers called? The blonde with freckles? Lily? Charlotte: Lesley Hay. Rather brighter than Gwyneth, but she’s a wonderful example of the way people get to look like their dogs. Hers is a shaggy golden retriever crossbreed called Bertie. Raphael: That’s cute! Charlotte: You like dogs? Raphael: Especially golden retriever crossbreeds with freckles. Charlotte: I see. Well, you can try your luck. You won’t find it particularly difficult. Lesley gets through even more boys than Gwyneth. Gideon: Really? How many . . . er, boyfriends has Gwyneth had? Charlotte: Oh, my God! This is kind of embarrassing. I don’t want to speak ill of her, it’s just that she’s not very discriminating. Particularly when she’s had a drink. She’s done the rounds of almost all the boys in our class and the class above us . . . I guess I lost track at some point. I’d rather not repeat what they call her. Raphael: The school mattress? Gideon: Pass the salt, please.
Kerstin Gier (Saphirblau (Edelstein-Trilogie, #2))
Being a hero to someone, even if it is a dog, is a feeling like no other. Though it can be frustrating, it can be the most rewarding thing to give someone a second chance at a happy life.
Elizabeth Parker (Finally Home: Lessons on Life from a Free-Spirited Dog (The Buddy Books))
May I tell you a wonderful truth about your dog? ... You have been given stewardship of what you in your faith might call a holy soul.
Dean Koontz (A Big Little Life: A Memoir of a Joyful Dog)
They say that a few minutes each day of petting your dog can raise your serotonin levels.
Neil S. Plakcy (In Dog We Trust (Golden Retriever Mystery #1))
The first thing everyone notices is the dog.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
We threw chew toys to Misty, Mom’s golden retriever that she bought two years ago secondhand. Misty was supposed to be a seeing-eye dog, but she failed her exam because she’s too affectionate. It’s a flaw we don’t mind.
Douglas Coupland (Microserfs)
Some assistance dogs also wear harnesses that have a large solid, handle, intended for use instead of a leash.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
The big one was at least cute, and as annoying as she was, you couldn't get mad at a golden retriever.
Chelsea Handler (Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea)
Whenever I needed a reassuring touch, Tuesday was there. He was my miracle dog. I already loved him and depended on him more than any other animal I'd ever known- and most other people, too.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
A few days later, Tuesday quietly crossed our apartment as I read a book and, after a nudge against my arm, put his head on my lap. As always, I immediately checked my mental state, trying to assess what was wrong. I knew a change in my biorhythms had brought Tuesday over, because he was always monitoring me, but I couldn't figure out what it was. Breathing? Okay. Pulse? Normal. Was I glazed or distracted? Was I lost in Iraq? Was a dark period descending? I didn't think so, but I knew something must be wrong, and I was starting to worry...until I looked into Tuesday's eyes. They were staring at me softly from under those big eyebrows, and there was nothing in them but love.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
May I tell you a wonderful truth about your dog? ... In our religion, we believe in reincarnation. We live many times, you see, always seeking to be wiser and more virtuous. If we eventually lead a blameless life, a perfect life, we leave this world and need not endure it again. Between our human lives, we may be reincarnated as other creatures. Sometimes, when someone has led a nearly perfect life but is not yet worthy of nirvana, that person is reincarnated as a very beautiful dog. When the life as the dog comes to an end, the person is reincarnated one last time as a human being, and lives a perfect life. Your dog is a person who has almost arrived at complete enlightenment and will in the next life be perfect and blameless, a very great person. You have been given stewardship of what you in your faith might call a holy soul.
Dean Koontz (A Big Little Life: A Memoir of a Joyful Dog)
When I put my hand on his head,he stepped onto the couch and raised his face to my own. We stared at each other for a few seconds and then slowly,Tuesday licked me. Yes,on the lips...and the chin...and the nose...slobbering all over my face with that big slow-moving tongue. That's the moment when Tuesday,after all his caution,stopped just being my service dog,and my emotional support,and my conversation piece. That's when he became my friend.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
Golden retrievers are not bred to be guard dogs, and considering the size of their hearts and their irrepressible joy in life, they are less likely to bite than to bark, less likely to bark than to lick a hand in greeting. In spite of their size, they think they are lap dogs, and in spite of being dogs, they think they are also human, and nearly every human they meet is judged to have the potential to be a boon companion who might, at any moment, cry “Let’s go!” and lead them on a great adventure.
Dean Koontz (The Darkest Evening of the Year)
We aren't just service dog and master, Tuesday and I are also best friends. Kindred souls, Brothers. Whatever you want to call it.
Luis Carlos Montalván (Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him)
Nice polka dots,” I say. He smiles. “Nice Labradors.” I mean, he’s cute, so I’ll let it slide, but the dogs on my pants are clearly golden retrievers.
Becky Albertalli (Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda)
The two “idiots” Ginger and Zach, both golden retrievers, both beautiful-looking dogs—and both thicker than bricks when it came to brains—had been out sunning on the bedroom deck. They stood up and barked madly, as if he were an invader. Though if he were a real invader they’d have cowered in terror and stained the carpet as they fled into Jennifer’s room to hide.
William R. Forstchen (One Second After)
No, not my dog. I was walking down the street, saw this golden retriever, and decided to name her Saskya and bring her home with me. It's not like I planned it or anything. It was just a spur-of-the-moment decision.
Frances Blackthorn (Trade Secret of a Messy Relationship (Under Seattle's Sky, #1))
The dog looked nothing like the lonely mongrel in her stories. The bedraggled golden retriever halted where the bungalow walkway met the public sidewalk. Girl and beast regarded each other. She called to him, “Here, boy, here.” He needed to be coaxed, but eventually he approached the porch and climbed the steps. Bibi stooped to his level to peer into his eyes, which were as golden as his coat. “You stink.” The retriever yawned, as if his stinkiness was old news to him. He
Dean Koontz (Ashley Bell)
to pull away. “I promise this dog will not hurt you,” he said. “This is a golden retriever. He has a scary bark because he’s big, but he would let anyone into the house. For a belly rub, he’d help the thieves carry the valuables to their getaway car.
Melinda Leigh (See Her Die (Bree Taggert, #2))
Considering what a hot, wed dog smells like, dog stew has a surprisingly savory odor To tell the truth, it tastes pretty good, like oxtail. To be perfectly honest, it's delicious. (Anything about this to my golden retriever, and I'll punch your lights out.)
P.J. O'Rourke (Holidays in Hell: In Which Our Intrepid Reporter Travels to the World's Worst Places and Asks, "What's Funny about This?")
And by the early 1970s our little parable of Sam and Sweetie is exactly what happened to the North American Golden Retriever. One field-trial dog, Holway Barty, and two show dogs, Misty Morn’s Sunset and Cummings’ Gold-Rush Charlie, won dozens of blue ribbons between them. They were not only gorgeous champions; they had wonderful personalities. Consequently, hundreds of people wanted these dogs’ genes to come into their lines, and over many matings during the 1970s the genes of these three dogs were flung far and wide throughout the North American Golden Retriever population, until by 2010 Misty Morn’s Sunset alone had 95,539 registered descendants, his number of unregistered ones unknown. Today hundreds of thousands of North American Golden Retrievers are descended from these three champions and have received both their sweet dispositions and their hidden time bombs. Unfortunately for these Golden Retrievers, and for the people who love them, one of these time bombs happens to be cancer. To be fair, a so-called cancer gene cannot be traced directly to a few famous sires, but using these sires so often increases the chance of recessive genes meeting—for good and for ill. Today, in the United States, 61.4 percent of Golden Retrievers die of cancer, according to a survey conducted by the Golden Retriever Club of America and the Purdue School of Veterinary Medicine. In Great Britain, a Kennel Club survey found almost exactly the same result, if we consider that those British dogs—loosely diagnosed as dying of “old age” and “cardiac conditions” and never having been autopsied—might really be dying of a variety of cancers, including hemangiosarcoma, a cancer of the lining of the blood vessels and the spleen. This sad history of the Golden Retriever’s narrowing gene pool has played out across dozens of other breeds and is one of the reasons that so many of our dogs spend a lot more time in veterinarians’ offices than they should and die sooner than they might. In genetic terms, it comes down to the ever-increasing chance that both copies of any given gene are derived from the same ancestor, a probability expressed by a number called the coefficient of inbreeding. Discovered in 1922 by the American geneticist Sewall Wright, the coefficient of inbreeding ranges from 0 to 100 percent and rises as animals become more inbred.
Ted Kerasote (Pukka's Promise: The Quest for Longer-Lived Dogs)
Excerpt from Storm’s Eye by Dean Gray With a final drag and drop, Jordan Rayne sent his latest creation winging its way toward the publisher. He looked up, squinted at that little clock in the right hand corner of his monitor, and removed his glasses to rub the bridge of his nose. His cover art was finished and shipped, just in time for lunch. He sighed and stood, rolling his shoulders and bending side to side, his back cracking in protest as the muscles loosened after having been hunched over the screen for so long. Sam raised his head, tilting it enquiringly at him, and Jordan laughed. “Yeah, I know what you want, some lunch and a nice long walk along the beach, hmm?” Jordan smiled fondly at the furry ball of energy he’d saved from certain death. With his mom’s recent death it was just Sam and him in the house. Sometimes he wondered what kept him here, now that the last thread tethering him to the island was severed. Sam limped over and nuzzled at his hand. When Jordan had first found him out on the main road, hurt and bleeding, he hadn’t been sure the pooch would make it. Taylor, his best friend and the local vet, had done what she could. At the time, Jordan simply didn’t have the deep pockets for the fancy surgery needed to mend Sam’s leg perfectly, he could barely afford the drugs to keep his mom in treatment. So they’d patched him up as well as they could, Taylor extending herself further than he could ever repay, and hoped for the best. The dog had made a startling recovery, urged on by plenty of rest and good food and lots of love, and had flourished, the slight limp now barely noticeable. Jordan’s conscience still twinged as he watched Sam limp over to his dish, but he had barely been keeping things together at the time. He had done the best he could. He’d done his best to find Sam’s real owners as well, papering downtown Bar Harbor with a hand-drawn sketch of the dog, but to no avail. The only thing it had prompted was one kind soul wanting to buy the illustration. But no one had ever come forward to claim the “goldendoodle,” which Taylor had told him was a golden retriever/standard poodle cross. Who had a dog breed like that anyway? Summer people! Jordan shook his head, grinning at the dog’s foolish antics, weaving in and around his legs like he was still a little pup instead of the fifty-pound fuzzball he actually was now. So without meaning to at all, Sam had drifted into Jordan’s life and stayed, a loyal, faithful companion.
Dean Gray
Peterson’s Golden Retriever. Before the Wolf Flu, it had been a show dog. The dog’s coat was a deep orange, highlighted with golden, metallic, shiny waves. After the Wolf Flu, Asa had mistaken the dog for a coyote. The creature had somehow lost all of its hair—Asa suspected that some cruel kid might have burned it off, or perhaps the dog had succumbed to a disease. The dog’s skin was grey and ashy. It had grown skinny and it had lost its left eye. Once Asa had seen the post-Wolf Flu dog trotting through the neighborhood with something bloody in its mouth—about a dozen foot-long strands of hair had been hanging from the animal’s closed jaws. To Asa it had looked like some woman’s hair.
Chad Leito (The Academy: Book 3)
For you make me glad by your deeds, Lord; I sing for joy at what your hands have done. —Psalm 92:4 (NIV) My golden retriever, Millie, and I were walking home from the dog park, where Millie socialized for a bit but mostly sat sedately next to me on a bench while I read. At five, Millie doesn’t play as rambunctiously as she once did. She has a few select friends whom she will cavort with, but her inner puppy rarely emerges anymore. Except when we pass Clement Clarke Moore Park, which is teeming with children. There is nothing my dog loves more than kids. She gives me a plaintive look as if to ask, “Can we go inside and have some real fun?” There is a sign, though, that says the park is only for kids and their parents or guardians. No dogs allowed. I gently tug on her leash. She is reluctant to go, dawdling and glancing longingly over her shoulder, her tail drooping. Lord, I wonder, do dogs know that they break our hearts? “Sir? Excuse me, sir?” A woman stood at the park’s gate, pushing a baby in a stroller trailed by two older kids. She waved at me. “Can my kids say hello to your dog?” Before I could answer, Millie was on the move, prancing and pulling me back. First she said hello to the baby, giving it a kiss, her tail flying. Then she bumped up against the older kids, letting them hug and pet her, all the while with an ecstatic look on her face. Finally the woman maneuvered her kids back into the park. “Thanks,” she said, “they really wanted to see a dog today.” Thank You, Lord, for giving us what we need, even a maturing golden retriever whose inner puppy still wants to play. —Edward Grinnan Digging Deeper: Ps 84:11
Guideposts (Daily Guideposts 2014)
As a rule, a yellow Labrador is never called a “golden” Labrador.
Dog Fancy Magazine (Labrador Retriever (Smart Owner's Guide))
No response came, which just proved what Jonah had always suspected: Red favored the boy over him. Jonah had known Red longer, but Cas had been his beloved protégé almost from the start, when his eyes had gone wide and dizzy the first time Red showed him his lair. “He peed in a potted plant. Killed my dog. Set fire to the embassy,” Jonah fired off in monotone. Finally, Red swiveled around to face him and folded his arms over his chest with a slow blink. “You don’t have a dog.” As if that was the most unbelievable of the three statements. “I could have a dog. You’d have no idea shut up in here like a hermit all day.” Red snorted. “Dogs are for humans with souls. You could have a cat, maybe.” He narrowed his eyes, like he wasn’t quite convinced that was a possibility, either. But Jonah grinned because now he’d gotten Red’s attention. “Caspian is a dog person,” he mused. “Definitely a dog person.” “Golden retriever?” Red seesawed his hand, face bunching up. “I could see it, I guess. Or maybe a greyhound. Hyper and quick, like him.
Onley James (Bad Habits (Wages of Sin, #1))
There is something irresistibly endearing about Guy Fieri, perhaps not in spite of his gaucherie as a broadcaster but because of it. Watching deeply competent colleagues humor and encourage this strange saxophone of a man as he bungles around like a golden retriever is medicine. It is okay to like this dog and his bungling. This is a difficult time, and it is okay to go to another place once in a while. Donald Trump is not the ptesident of Flavortown.
Lindy West (The Witches Are Coming)
have never had a poodle but I know that they are very special dogs. People who have poodles are crazy about them and often have more than one! My friend Annie loves her two black miniature poodles, Oggi and Pearl. They are so smart and funny and they love to curl up in your lap just like a cat would. And my friend Leda has two golden doodles, Pippa and Pogo. They love to play together. Even though they are only half poodle (the other half is golden retriever), they have to be groomed every ten weeks, just like poodles do. Yours from the Puppy Place, Ellen Miles P.S.
Ellen Miles (Sweetie (The Puppy Place, #18))
and Santa and his sleigh rested on the lawn in front of the hardware store, each reindeer wearing a tool belt.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
PDA,
Neil S. Plakcy (In Dog We Trust (Golden Retriever Mystery #1))
We passed a building where the first “S” had been torn away from the “Self-Storage” sign, and I wondered if that was where Santa kept his elves when he didn’t need them.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
We took them up to the register, where the student worker on duty had a large silver ring pierced through the side of her nose. I had an urge to get Rochester’s leash and see if I could hook it to her ring, but I resisted.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
Probably one of those who ostentatiously carried plastic bags but never stooped to using one.
Neil S. Plakcy (In Dog We Trust (Golden Retriever Mystery #1))
What do you think, boy? Can you pretend to be a service dog?
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
Remember, don’t burn your bridges—there might be crocodiles in the river.
Neil S. Plakcy (Dog Helps Those (Golden Retriever Mysteries #3))
However unsophisticated a feeling disgust may seem like, it actually entails a kind of metaphysics: a sense that some things are deeply impure and emit an invisible aura of badness, creating a dread zone. Pascal Boyer has suggested that disgust — our “contagion inference system”—may thus energize notions of ritual pollution that figure in many religions. (Recall the sin that so peeved the sea goddess in chapter 1: failing to throw out items contaminated by proximity to a miscarriage.) There is another feature of the human mind that may be involved in religious experience and that, like the “contagion inference system,” is a way of taking account of causality without thinking consciously about it. In fact, it entered our lineage so long before consciously rational thought that it exists in all mammals. It is called “associative learning.” If a dog burns itself on rocks that surround a dying campfire, it will thereafter avoid such rocks. What is going on in the dog’s mind is hard to say, but it probably isn’t extended reflection on the causal link between fires and hot rocks, or between hot rocks and singed fur. Presumably the dog has just acquired something like a fear of those rocks, a fear that leads it to behave as if it understood the connection between rocks around dying campfires and singed fur. I once tried to walk a golden retriever past an intersection where, weeks earlier, she had been hit by a car. As we approached the intersection, she walked more and more slowly and warily until finally she came to a halt and started desperately resisting attempts to move her farther. It was as if, in her mind, the intersection was giving off a kind of spooky aura, and the closer she got to it, the stronger the aura felt.
Robert Wright
I studied each page with surprising focus and found myself returning to golden retrievers: easy to train, loyal, big, great running partners, and beautiful. A family dog. My new family.
Julie Barton (Dog Medicine)
Did he have extra-sharp hearing or just a sixth sense about the approach of his best friend?
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
There was no matching real, Jersey-style pizza
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
services
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
truth, justice and the American way.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
The Bronx.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
had an old one-gig jump drive and
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
All the political name-calling and putting blame on immigrants.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
avoiding health code restrictions about animals in food service areas.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
What did we do before we were so tethered? I
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
click of doggie
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
immigration program, focused on the way that hashtags like #shutthedoor and #immigrationreform had their roots in historical attitudes of isolationism.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
Would we ever learn to get along with each other?
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
The argument is that they need to assimilate and adopt American customs. And that feeling often leads to cruelty and crime.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
Seen too many dumb bikers who end up in the hospital
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
immigration
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
hijab,
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
murdered go free.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
scrabble of toenails on the tile floor.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
sticky peanut butter
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
between
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
still remembered stories my parents told of the hurricane that had destroyed the bridge between Yardley and West Trenton.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
New York Times
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
she’s sure she’s going to be the next J. K. Rowling.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
the classical definition, originated by MIT, I was a guy with an interest in how things work,
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
North Jersey
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
people born in Cuba represented less than 1% of the U.S. population but committed 41% of Medicare fraud.
Neil S. Plakcy (Honest to Dog (Golden Retriever Mysteries #7))
skip a day’s class
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
can barely remember those days, when I had the whole summer off to read.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
Brooklyn, and every now and then when we’d go visit them we’d stop on the Lower East Side to
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
Harvest Days, a fall festival on the grounds of the Quaker Meeting
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
wooden pews for worship services.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
Veterans of Foreign Wars, who
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
was born a Quaker,
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
Yeah, but satisfaction brought him back.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
toenails scrabbling
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
lower-income New York
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
God is everywhere, you know.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
minister’s gallery
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
dogs weren’t supposed to be at Eastern unless they were guide dogs.
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
My hometown is still compact,
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
doggie toenails on
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
Her family does,” I said, making things up as quickly as I could. “His name is Gumbo and he’s a golden retriever. And these bad guys have kidnapped the dog and told Erica that they’ll kill him if she doesn’t do their bidding.” “Oh no!” Chip exclaimed, horrified. I thought I saw tears welling in his eyes. Zoe gave him a withering look. “You don’t honestly believe this, do you?” “Er… maybe,” Chip said. “Erica could have a dog.” “She’s never mentioned it,” Zoe pointed out. “She never mentioned that she had a mother who was a covert operative for MI6 either,” I said.
Stuart Gibbs (Spy School Revolution (Spy School, #8))
going to the Meetings
Neil S. Plakcy (Three More Dogs in a Row (Golden Retriever Mysteries #4-6))
She poked the fire with a stick. “Hey, what do you think about Fyodor killing that rabbit? Do you think it was cruel?” I shrugged. “A lot of people eat rabbit.” “When I was a kid, I had a bunny as a pet. It was white with black spots. I called it Thumper, from Bambi.” “Thumper was brown.” “Anyway, I think it’s cruel to kill rabbits.” “If you had a chicken as a pet, would you never eat chicken?” “That’s not the same thing. Chickens are dumb.” “Rabbits are pretty dumb,” I said. “People don’t eat dogs,” she said. “They do in Korea.” “You know what I mean. You don’t cook up a Golden Retriever.” “Golden Retrievers are smart.” “So it’s based on intelligence, what we can kill, and what we can’t?” “Seems that way.” “Where do you draw the line? Why’s it okay to kill a deer but not a horse? I don’t think horses are any smarter than deer.” “What are you getting at?” I asked. “Nothing,” she said. “I just think it’s odd you can go around and kill a cute little bunny and nobody bats an eye, but if you shoot a dog or cat you’re sick, and if you shoot your neighbor, you’re really sick and get locked up in a cell for the rest of your life.” “It’s ethics,” I said. “Ethics is bullshit. There’s no objective right or wrong, just what’s allowed and not allowed. Which is subjective, made up, by us.
Jeremy Bates (Mountain of the Dead (World's Scariest Places #5))
I see only two concerns: One, I’ll stand out like a prep at a punk concert with an eighty-five pound golden retriever at my side. Two, Hitch will lick somebody to death.
McCall Hoyle (The Thing with Feathers)
threat, even if ineffectively. She reads aloud from Eliot—“‘I said to my soul, be still, and wait without hope, for hope would be hope for the wrong thing’”—and then she closes the book and sets it aside. The smallest and simplest of the four urns holds the ashes of a golden retriever, Cassie, who lived twelve years in the splendid joy and innocence that is the lot of beloved dogs.
Dean Koontz (The House at the End of the World)
Our golden retriever Beau was our master teacher in how to greet a loved one. There were days when he would almost knock my husband over after work, meeting him at the front door with happy crying, enthusiastic tail wagging, and a big smile. When Beau died, his evening greeting was noticeably absent. But a few days later, my daughter and I had an idea: When we heard the doorknob turn, we would run to the door, hugging and kissing my husband in a pretty good imitation of Beau. Our dog had taught us how to show love by sincerely welcoming the people we care about into our orbit.
Laurie J. Cameron (The Mindful Day: Practical Ways to Find Focus, Calm, and Joy From Morning to Evening)
Golden retrievers, especially rescued ones, have an uncanny understanding of the world. They know evil exists, but they treat each person, animal, and opportunity as if it is a birthday gift or a new ball. Until they are given a reason to believe otherwise, they embrace everything with a happy heart and an infectious smile. When they are in pain, they don’t show it. They simply plod along and look for the joy in the situation. If it is a bone on a doctor’s table, a scrap of food from a kind stranger, or a fetch session in the backyard, they find happiness in the simple things. Ernie Bert has mastered this. Instead of worrying
Heidi H Speece (My Journey with Ernie: Lessons from a Turkey Dog)
I was hoping to talk to you, Nic.” Oh? “You have to do something about that dog.” Oh. “Tiger?” “What other dog roams this town at will and always manages to get in my way? This must be the last town in America not to have leash laws on the books.” “Actually, I agree with you about that. It’s not safe for the animals, and it’s something Eternity Springs will need to address once we have more visitors to town. What did he do now?” “I had a breakfast meeting at the Mocha Moose this morning. He was sitting at the door when I left, and he followed me back here. He’s been hanging around all day. You were supposed to find a home for him. That was the deal, was it not?” “Yes, and I’m still trying.” She licked her lips, then offered a smile just shy of sheepish. “Dale Parker has agreed to consider taking him.” Gabe jerked his stare away from her mouth as he asked, “So why is he underfoot every time I turn around?” “I explained that to you before. He’s adopted you.” “He’s a dog. It’s not his choice!” “Oh, for crying out loud,” Sage said. “Give it up, Callahan. I saw you slip that dog a hunk of your sandwich earlier. Way to chase him away.” Gabe didn’t bother defending himself, but watched Nic for a long minute before asking, “And where might I find Dale Parker?” “He owns the Fill-U-Up.” “That grumpy old son of a gun? No wonder the mutt has taken to hiding out with me. Is he the best you could do?” She watched it register on his face the moment he realized the mistake. Nic decided to take pity on him, mostly because her embarrassment lingered and she needed distance. “Where’s Tiger now?” “Here, at the foot of the stairs.” “He can stay with us.” She lifted her voice and called, “Tiger? Here, boy. C’mere, boy.” Four paws’ worth of nails clicked against the wooden floor. The boxer paused in the doorway and rubbed up against Gabe’s legs. “Awww,” Sage crooned as Sarah said, “He’s so cute. Gabe is right. He’s too sweet to hang with Dale Parker.” Nic dropped her hand and wiggled her fingers. Reluctantly the boxer approached. “You willing to take him home, Sarah?” “I can’t. Daisy and Duke are all I can handle. You know that.” She referred to the three-year-old golden retrievers who refused to leave the puppy stage behind. Nic scratched the boxer behind the ears and said, “What about you, big guy? Wanna watch the basketball game with us?” When the boxer climbed up on her knees and licked her face, she smiled and looped a finger through his leather collar. “We’ve got him. Sorry for the trouble, Callahan.” Gabe nodded, then glanced at the television and fired a parting shot. “You do know that Coach Romano has a twin brother who coaches at Southern Cal, don’t you?” Seated
Emily March (Angel's Rest (Eternity Springs, #1))
She’d lived enough places around the world to know how Americans were perceived; if every country were made up of dogs, they were the Golden Retrievers…some of them were smart and sweet, but there were an awful lot that were overbred and obnoxious.
Emigh Cannaday (Balkan Magic)
girl Rick had
Neil S. Plakcy (In Dog We Trust (Golden Retriever Mystery #1))
brought in
Neil S. Plakcy (In Dog We Trust (Golden Retriever Mystery #1))
We ought to forget all this silliness about fund-raising and public relations and get back to what we do best. Educating the young.” As we watched Babson laugh and
Neil S. Plakcy (The Kingdom of Dog (Golden Retriever Mysteries #2))
Since a year encompasses a great deal of events, so do our services in the month of Elul. As we prepare for the redemption offered us by Yom Kippur, we focus on what I like to call the three T’s: Torah, tefilah, and tzedakah.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
How people pervert religious doctrine to serve their own needs.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)
Exactly.” Rabbi Hillel, one of the early Jewish sages, had been challenged to state the essence of Judaism while standing on one foot. He had said, “Love thy neighbor as thyself.
Neil S. Plakcy (Golden Retriever Mysteries 7-9: Honest to Dog, Dog is in the Details & Dog Knows)