Started Early, Took My Dog: A Novel
Started Early, Took My Dog: A Novel book cover

Started Early, Took My Dog: A Novel

Audio CD – Unabridged, March 21, 2011

Price
$53.86
Publisher
Reagan Arthur Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1607886785
Dimensions
5.25 x 1.5 x 5.75 inches
Weight
9.6 ounces

Description

"Brilliant...Atkinson seamlessly weaves together [strands] in a plot driven by coincidence and a diamond-hard recognition of man's darker nature...[Tracy's] odyssey as a new parent to a waif dressed in a ragged fairy costume, relayed with both tenderness and wry wit, must be one of the grandest love affairs in crime fiction...For its singular melding of radiant humor and dark deeds, this is must-reading for literary crime-fiction fans."― Joanne Wilkinson , Booklist, starred review "The sleuthing is less important than Atkinson's fascinating take on the philosophical and emotional dimensions of her characters' lives."― Kirkus "[The Jackson Brodie books] are an entrancing hybrid of the literary novel/detective story. Case Histories...is a classic....Atkinson's views of contemporary society can be bleak, but she has an amazing eye for kids, dogs and human fallibility." ― Mary Ann Gwinn , The Seattle Times "Magnificently plotted...In the author's signature multilayered style, she shifts between past and present...Atkinson injects wit even in the bleakest moments...yet never loses her razor-sharp edge."― Publishers Weekly, starred review "I can't take my nose out of Kate Atkinson's new thriller, Started Early, Took My Dog ."― Alex Beam , The Boston Globe "Mixing wry wit and gritty realism, Atkinson deftly smudges the border between literary and detective fiction-with complex, compelling characters negotiating a maze of grisly violence, dark secrets, and shadowy dangers."― Karen Holt , O, The Oprah Magazine "Wonderful...full of artful digressions and unexpected turns, but it amply makes good on its obligations as a mystery novel to explain the who, what and why." ― Tom Nolan , Wall Street Journal "Mold-breaking...Each one of these [Jackson Brodie] books, including this latest, is a delight: an intricate construction that assembles itself before the reader's eyes, populated by idiosyncratic, multidimensional characters and written with shrewd, mordant grace. They are in some respects mystery novels, but they're written with a literary skill uncommon in that genre, and in a mode -- the tragicomic -- that few but the most adept novelists can pull off in any genre."― Laura Miller , Salon Ms. Atkinson writes passages that simply have to be read twice, once when you first travel through the book and then later, when you want to see just how she tricked you...Ms. Atkinson remains a wonderful stylist and Grade A schemer...She was never confined to the crime genre, has written in assorted other modes and excels at them all. Whatever she goes on to write, she leaves Jackson Brodie at a suspenseful and pivotal moment. Future installments are well worth waiting for." ― Janet Maslin , New York Times "Every time I hear Kate Atkinson has a new novel on the way, I'm filled with delight. I look forward to many authors' books with pleasure and interest, but Atkinson is such a virtuoso that my brain starts fizzing like a glass of bubbly even before I crack the covers. Started Early, Took My Dog does not disappoint...A witty, moving, suspenseful and always surprising story about the things we do for love...Atkinson's books stake out their own territory on the border between mysteries and literary fiction. There are crimes in this book...but Atkinson is just as concerned with crimes of the heart, and with the unexpected consequences of good intentions. She layers plot and time periods with consummate skill, creating novels that work like elegant jazz improvisations, taking us onto amazing yet believable paths that eventually weave together into an even more astonishing result...Atkinson, as always, brings something fresh to [themes as old as storytelling].― Colette Bancroft , St. Petersburg Times

Features & Highlights

  • Tracy Waterhouse leads a quiet, ordered life as a retired police detective -- a life that takes a surprising turn when she encounters Kelly Cross, a habitual offender, dragging a young child through town. Both appear miserable and better off without each other -- or so decides Tracy, in a snap decision that surprises herself as much as Kelly. Suddenly burdened with a small child, Tracy soon learns her parental inexperience is actually the least of her problems, as much larger ones loom for her and her young charge. Meanwhile, Jackson Brodie, the beloved detective of novels such as
  • Case Histories
  • , is embarking on a different sort of rescue: that of an abused dog. Dog in tow, Jackson is about to learn, along with Tracy, that no good deed goes unpunished.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.9K)
★★★★
25%
(1.5K)
★★★
15%
(925)
★★
7%
(432)
23%
(1.4K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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The thoughts of the middle-aged, & of dementia...

I didn't read it--I listened to the CD of it--a random pick from the audiobooks at the library, never having read or listened to anything by this author before--and I will be looking for others by her now. I think going back & forth between the present & the past, & between a few characters/subplots is a pretty common technique--you see it in movies & tv shows all the time--so I don't see what all the fuss about that is. I found the reader of the audio version totally engaging, but because I was listening to it, I did sometimes take a few seconds to catch on that we'd just switched to a different character's story or time line. The main trouble I had was with the British slang & abbreviations. (e.g. I know that an A-something & an M-something are highways ("motorways"), but the police stuff--e.g. what's a pc? Patrol cop?) I lost a little fine detail with skipping over those things, but it wasn't critical to knowing what was going on. (A glossary of the abbreviations would have been nice tho--at least for the American edition--including the audiobook?)

What I loved the most was the thoughts each of the main characters were having. I could identify with the middle-aged musings--choices made in the past, how she got to be a middle-aged woman with no spouse or kids ("once having established yourself as a tough [bird-witch]" (in order to be respected as one of the guys in a male-dominated occupation), "it's hard to then have a soft, fluffy side"--"and after years of building up a protective shell" (against both her coworkers & all the awful stuff cops deal with), there's hardly any soft, fluffiness left to find), what & who are you now (the male excop, after adopting the rescued dog, "knows what he is now--he is a dog-owner"). I found the idea fascinating that the author presents what is going on inside the head of someone with advancing dementia (I would say mid-stage, from having just gone thru this with my mother)--the actress is sometimes lost in a jumble of memories she wishes would stop; sometimes knows something is wrong, & sometimes doesn't; sometimes doesn't know if it's day or night, reality or tv, or why people around her are acting the way they are. In the early & mid stages, when people start to realize something is wrong, they try to hide it from others, so I don't know how the author could know what would be going on inside such a person's head, but it's fascinating--and sad, and tragic. I'm not sure, either, why this character was included in the story, as her role is minimal, but she was fascinating, nonetheless.
3 people found this helpful
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Boring, boring, boring...

I read several books a month. Can't remember why I purchased this one. Perhaps I was having a bout of insomnia and thought it might help. There was nothing to pull me into the storyline and no characters whose names I cared to remember. I have no idea where it was going when the book and I parted ways, but I'm so glad I tossed it.
2 people found this helpful
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Engaging book

Very interesting and engaging. Haven't finished, but anxious to see where it is going. I do not have enough words for this review, but as much as I will give at this time
1 people found this helpful
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Lives of quiet desperation, moments of heroism

Don't be fooled by the stylish cover and whimsical title. If there are laughs to be had it's at the author's brilliant turns of phrase (one character has "heart of lard."). This is very much a book about England in its particular sense of place and people. It is also tangentially a crime novel in the way that Atkinson, like Richard Price on the other side of the pond, writes literature that happens to involve criminals. Amid occasional sardonic humor the book is centered on a few interconnected lives of quiet desperation and flashing moments of heroism. If this book had a theme song it would probably be "Eleanor Rigby." If this book was only a set of compelling character portraits I'd still find it worthwhile, but there is a plot that dutifully pays off. Apart from Richard Price and a few others, "crime literature" usually fails as either literature or genre fiction plotcraft. Kate Atkinson is among the best in this particular class, and I'll seek out more of her work.
1 people found this helpful