Clive D.L. Wynne is the founding director of the Canine Science Collaboratory at Arizona State University. Previously, he was founding
director of the Canine Cognition and Behavior Laboratory at the University of Florida, the first lab of its kind in the United States. A native of the United Kingdom, Wynne has lived and worked in Germany and Australia as well as the United States and gives frequent talks to paying audiences around the world. The author of several academic books and of more than 100 peer-reviewed scientific journal articles that count among the most highly cited studies on dog psychology, he has also published pieces in
Psychology Today,
New Scientist, and the
New York Times, and has appeared in several television documentaries about dog science on National Geographic Explorer, PBS, and the BBC.
Wynne's latest book is
Dog Is Love: Why and How Your Dog Loves You.
At Shepherd he tagged five of the best books on how dogs love people, including:
My Dog Tulip by J. R. Ackerley
There are many books about the love between dog and man – but this classic is surely one of the richest, warmest, and yet most clear-eyed. The author, Joe Ackerley, was a gay man in London in the mid-twentieth century at a time when his predilections could get him arrested and imprisoned. It is perhaps because he couldn’t easily be open about the love he felt for other people that he is so well able to capture and express the love that exists between man and dog. “Unable to love each other, the English turn naturally to dogs,” he wrote.
Read about
the other entries on the list.
--Marshal Zeringue