Must Love Dogs

Must Love Dogs

by Claire Cook
Must Love Dogs

Must Love Dogs

by Claire Cook

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Overview

"Wildly witty."-USA Today
"Funny and pitch perfect."-Chicago Tribune
"This book is a hoot."-The Boston Globe

First the much-loved novel by New York Times bestselling author Claire Cook. Then the major romantic comedy movie adaptation starring Diane Lane and John Cusack. Now MUST LOVE DOGS is a tail-waggingly fun 8-book series.

"Voluptuous, sensuous, alluring and fun. Barely 40 DWF seeks special man to share starlit nights. Must love dogs."

Divorced preschool teacher Sarah Hurlihy's first mistake is letting her bossy big sister write her personal ad. Her second mistake is showing up to meet her first date in more than a decade. Now she's juggling her teaching job, her big, rollicking, interfering south-of-Boston Irish family, and more men than she knows what to do with. And what's up with all these dogs that are suddenly galloping into her life?

The Must Love Dogs series:
Must Love Dogs (#1)
Must Love Dogs: New Leash on Life (#2)
Must Love Dogs: Fetch You Later (#3)
Must Love Dogs: Bark & Roll Forever (#4)
Must Love Dogs: Who Let the Cats In? (#5)
Must Love Dogs: A Howliday Tail (#6)
Must Love Dogs: Hearts & Barks (#7)
Must Love Dogs: Lucky Enough (#8)

Nobody drives you crazier than family, and nobody loves you more.

"Reading Must Love Dogs is like having lunch with your best friend-fun, breezy, and full of laughs."-Lorna Landvik

"Funny and quirky and honest."-Jane Heller

"Cook dishes up plenty of charm."-San Francisco Chronicle

"There is a compelling honesty and gentleness to Claire Cook's work that I find irresistible. Warm and real and insightfully funny; resonant with the small truths and laughs of recognition that elevate and illuminate our daily struggles."-Gary David Goldberg

"The exuberant and charming Claire Cook is one of the sassiest and funniest creators of contemporary women's fiction."-The Times-Picayune

"Claire Cook (Must Love Dogs) has built a brand writing light-hearted women's fiction blending kernels of the absurd and comedic in compulsively readable combinations."-Shelf Awareness

"Must Love Dogs has already been a major motion picture, and now New York Times bestselling author Claire Cook's hilarious and heartwarming series is begging to hit the screen again."-New York Journal of Books

"Claire Cook's characters aren't rich or glamorous-they're physically imperfect, emotionally insecure, and deeply familiar. Must Love Dogs is a sweet, funny novel about first dates and second chances."-Tom Perrotta

"Must Love Dogs is a must read."-Caroline Preston

"This story is so delicious, so funny, so warm, that one engages on the first page and still wants more on the last. A truly joyful read."-Jeanne Ray

"Whether you are a long-time fan or a new reader, jump right in to Claire Cook's newest Must Love Dogs adventure. Your spirits will be lifted, and you'll be charmed by the witty repartee, the twinkle in the author's eye, a beautifully structured plot, and a wonderfully resilient main character to cheer for."-Examiner


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780989921008
Publisher: Marshbury Beach Books
Publication date: 09/18/2013
Series: Must Love Dogs , #1
Pages: 268
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

I wrote my first novel in my minivan at 45. At 50, I walked the red carpet at the Hollywood premiere of the adaptation of my second novel, Must Love Dogs, starring Diane Lane and John Cusack. If you have a buried dream, trust me, it is NEVER too late! I guess it's no surprise that reinvention is the overarching theme of my novels and my life. I like to think the heroines in my (eleven and counting!) novels have helped lots of women find their own next chapters, and I also take great joy in sharing what I've learned so far on the Reinvention and Writing pages at ClaireCook.com. My books have been called everything from romantic comedy to women's fiction to beach reads to chick lit. Honestly, it doesn't matter to me what you call them. I just hope you read and enjoy them!

Hometown:

Scituate, Massachusetts

Date of Birth:

February 14, 1955

Place of Birth:

Alexandria, Virginia

Education:

B.A., Film and Creative Writing, Syracuse University

Read an Excerpt

1

I decided to listen to my family and get back out there. "There's life after divorce, Sarah," my father proclaimed, not that he'd ever been divorced.

"The longer you wait, the harder it'll be" was my sister Carol's little gem, as if she had some way of knowing whether or not that was true.

After months of ignoring them, responding to a personal ad in the newspaper seemed the most detached way to give in. I wouldn't have to sit in a restaurant with a friend of a friend of one of my brothers, probably Michael's, but maybe Johnny's or Billy Jr.'s, pretending to enjoy a meal I was too nervous to taste. I needn't endure even a phone conversation with someone my sister Christine had talked into calling me. My prospect and I would quietly connect on paper or we wouldn't.

HONEST, HOPELESSLY ROMANTIC old-fashioned gentleman seeks lady friend who enjoys elegant dining, dancing and the slow bloom of affection. WM, n/s, young 50's, widower, loves dogs, children and long meandering bicycle rides.

The ad jumped out at me the first time I looked. There wasn't much competition. Rather than risk a geographic jump to one of the Boston newspapers, I'd decided it was safer and less of an effort to confine my search to the single page of classifieds in the local weekly. Seven towns halfway between Boston and Cape Cod were clumped together in one edition. Four columns of "Women Seeking Men." A quarter of a column of "Men Seeking Women," two entries of "Women Seeking Women," and what was left of that column was "Men Seeking Men."

I certainly had no intention of adding to the disheartening surplus of heterosexual women placing ads, so I turned my attention to the second category. It was comprised of more than its share of control freaks, like this guy-Seeking attractive woman between 5'4" and 5'6", 120-135 lbs., soft-spoken, no bad habits, financially secure, for possible relationship. I could picture this dreamboat making his potential relationships step on the scale and show their bank statements before he penciled them in for a look-see.

And then this one. Quaint, charming, almost familiar somehow. When I got to the slow bloom of affection, it just did me in. Made me remember how lonely I was.

I circled the ad in red pen, then tore it out of the paper in a jagged rectangle. I carried it over to my computer and typed a response quickly, before I could change my mind:

Dear Sir:

You sound too good to be true, but perhaps we could have a cup of coffee together anyway-at a public place. I am a WF, divorced, young 40, who loves dogs and children, but doesn't happen to have either.

-Cautiously Optimistic

I mailed my letter to a Box 308P at the County Connections offices, which would, in turn, forward it. I enclosed a small check to secure my own box number for responses. Less than a week later I had my answer:

Dear Madam,

Might I have the privilege of buying you coffee at Morning Glories in Marshbury at 10 AM this coming Saturday? I'll be carrying a single yellow rose.

-Awaiting Your Response

The invitation was typed on thick ivory paper with an actual typewriter, the letters O and E forming solid dots of black ink, just like the old manual of my childhood. I wrote back simply, Time and place convenient. Looking forward to it.

I didn't mention my almost-date to anyone, barely even allowed myself to think about its possibilities. There was simply no sense in getting my hopes up, no need to position myself for a fall.

I woke up a few times Friday night, but it wasn't too bad. It's not as if I stayed up all night tossing and turning. And I tried on just a couple of different outfits on Saturday morning, finally settling on a yellow sweater and a long skirt with an old-fashioned floral print. I fluffed my hair, threw on some mascara and brushed my teeth a second time before heading out the door.

Morning Glories is just short of trendy, a delightfully overgrown hodgepodge of sun-streaked greenery, white lattice and round button tables with mismatched iron chairs. The coffee is strong and the baked goods homemade and delicious. You could sit at a table for hours without getting dirty looks from the people who work there. The long Saturday-morning take-out line backed up to the door, and it took me a minute to maneuver my way over to the tables. I scanned quickly, my senses on overload, trying to pick out the rose draped across the table, to remember the opening line I had rehearsed on the drive over.

"Sarah, my darlin' girl. What a lovely surprise. Come here and give your dear old daddy a hug."

"Dad? What are you doing here?"

"Well, that's a fine how-do-you-do. And from one of my very favorite daughters at that."

"Where'd you get the rose, Dad?"

"Picked it this morning from your dear mother's rose garden. God rest her soul."

"Uh, who's it for?"

"A lady friend, honey. It's the natural course of this life that your dad would have lady friends now, Sarry. I feel your sainted mother whispering her approval to me every day."

"So, um, you're planning to meet this lady friend here, Dad?"

"That I am, God willing."

Somewhere in the dusty corners of my brain, synapses were connecting. "Oh my God. Dad. I'm your date. I answered your personal ad. I answered my own father's personal ad." I mean, of all the personal ads in all the world I had to pick this one?

My father looked at me blankly, then lifted his shaggy white eyebrows in surprise. His eyes moved skyward as he cocked his head to one side. He turned his palms up in resignation. "Well, now, there's one for the supermarket papers. Honey, it's okay, no need to turn white like you've seen a ghost. Here. This only proves I brought you up to know the diamond from the riffraff."

Faking a quick recovery is a Hurlihy family tradition, so I squelched the image of a single yellow rose in a hand other than my father's. I took a slow breath, assessing the damage to my heart. "Not only that, Dad, but maybe you and I can do a Jerry Springer show together. How 'bout 'Fathers Who Date Daughters'? I mean, this is big, Dad, the Oedipal implications alone-"

"Oedipal, smedipal. Don't be getting all college on me now, Sarry girl." My father peered out from under his eyebrows. "And lovely as you are, you're even lovelier when you're a smidgen less flip."

I swallowed back the tears that seemed to be my only choice besides flip, and sat down in the chair across from my father. Our waitress came by and I managed to order a coffee. "Wait a minute. You're not a young fifty, Dad. You're sixty-six. And when was the last time you rode a bike? You don't own a bike. And you hate dogs."

"Honey, don't be so literal. Think of it as poetry, as who I am in the bottom of my soul. And, Sarah, I'm glad you've started dating again. Kevin was not on his best day good enough for you, sweetie."

"I answered my own father's personal ad. That's not dating. That's sick."

My father watched as a pretty waitress leaned across the table next to ours. His eyes stayed on her as he patted my hand and said, "You'll do better next time, honey. Just keep up the hard work." I watched as my father raked a clump of thick white hair away from his watery brown eyes. The guy could find a lesson in...Jesus, a date with his daughter.

"Oh, Dad, I forgot all about you. You got the wrong date, too. You must be lonely without Mom, huh?"

The waitress stood up, caught my father's eye and smiled. She walked away, and he turned his gaze back to me. "I think about her every day, all day. And will for the rest of my natural life. But don't worry about me. I have a four o'clock."

"What do you mean, a four o'clock? Four o'clock Mass?"

"No, darlin'. A wee glass of wine at four o'clock with another lovely lady. Who couldn't possibly hold a candle to you, my sweet."

I supposed that having a date with a close blood relative was far less traumatic if it was only one of the day's two dates. I debated whether to file that tidbit away for future reference, or to plunge into deep and immediate denial that the incident had ever happened. I lifted my coffee mug to my lips. My father smiled encouragingly.

Perhaps the lack of control was in my wrist. Maybe I merely forgot to swallow. But as my father reached across the table with a pile of paper napkins to mop the burning coffee from my chin, I thought it even more likely that I had simply never learned to be a grown-up.

—From Must Love Dogs by Claire Cook (c) July 2002, Viking Press, used by permission.

Interviews

Exclusive Author Essay
I am famous in every aisle of the supermarket in a town called Scituate, pronounced SIT-choo-it. The town is on the coast about halfway between Boston and Cape Cod. Your family has to live there for several generations before you're considered a townie, which basically means that once you're dead you can have a street named after you, but by most standards I've lived there a very, very long time. We're talking decades.

After my first novel was published, I was pretty sure no one in the whole town would ever speak to me again. People have always told me their stories, you see, and these stories kind of merged with the story I was making up and I figured nobody's novel ever really sells anyway, so why not take advantage of some good, organic material, and besides, I'd changed the lawsuit-worthy details and hadn't used anyone's real name.

So when the book came out, I walked my dog at 2 a.m. (and yes, the dog would eventually become material, too, but fortunately she is not a literate dog), drove a couple of hundred miles to go grocery shopping, that sort of thing. No real paranoia, but close attention to the realty sections of newspapers from other time zones. And I wrote. I dug into that second novel, which became Must Love Dogs after a line in a personal ad. I knew it would have to be good, real good, because when the school where I taught fired me for the material I excavated there, I'd need a career.

And then one day I did it. I shopped at the local supermarket. It was 7 a.m., which was early for grocery shopping, but not early enough. I handed my plastic card to the cashier. "Are you Claire Cook?" she asked as she scanned it.

"Why?" I whispered.

"I read your book," she practically yelled.

"Thank you," I whispered.

She scanned my bottle of Liquid Plumber and let it go. I watched it take out my pint of raspberries. "Are you writing another book?" she asked, even louder if that was possible.

"Yes," I admitted softly.

"What's it about?" she asked before she sent the romaine after the Liquid Plumber.

I'm really bad at that question. I can only answer it about books I didn't write. "Well," I attempted because she was handling my groceries and therefore had all the power. "It's about a man in his 60s who's dating through the personal ads."

"What's he look like?" she asked.

"Well, he's got thick white hair and shiny brown eyes and he drives a black Mazda Miata. And he's a widower and he's dating at least two women and embarrassing all of his adult children. One of them is the heroine, who's a preschool teacher and recently divorced and her family finally talks her into going on her first date in almost a decade...."

The cashier leaned over the conveyor belt that separated us. "The man..." she whispered.

"Yes?" I whispered back.

She looked over her shoulder, then into my eyes. "I think," she said, "I dated him."

Until that moment I thought I had made him up. Still, I listened to her date details and nodded while my frozen yogurt melted, even jotted down some more material in my notebook when I got out to the car.

Just as I was turning the key in the ignition, there was a knock on the hood of my car. "Claire?" an old friend yelled as I rolled down the window.

"Hi," I whispered. "How've you been?"

"Tell me the truth, the wild friend in your novel. That's me, right?"

"Well..." I whispered.

"It's okay," she said. "Really. And wait till you hear this..."

I've started going out again in broad daylight. And wherever I go, the wonderful people of Scituate, Massachusetts, hand me their stories, their dirt, their dish, on a silver platter. I can hardly wait to find out who else has dated one of my characters. (Claire Cook)

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