Librarian dog
(Picture Credit: Tudor Costache/Getty Images)

Book Lovers Day: 5 Books Every Dog Lover Should Read

There’s nothing quite like curling up with a good book, and it’s even better when you can curl up with a good pup to hug while you read about dogs. Book Lovers Day is coming up on August 9th, so it’s a perfect time to add to your summer reading list.

There are plenty of great books for dog lovers filled with stories that really hit home for anyone who’s ever felt that deep emotional connection you only get from loving a dog.

Here are a few of my favorite books about dogs that every dog lover should read and enjoy, especially on Book Lovers Day!

1. Go, Dog. Go!

Cover art for Go, Dog. Go! A dog with a hat and scarf drives a yellow car.
(Photo Credit: Random House Books via Amazon)

This is the book that started it all for me. As a kid, I begged my mom to read this book to me so many times that she probably still has it memorized by heart.

It’s a simple story with small words and short sentences, which is perfect for teaching a kid to read. The story is about lots of different dogs who all go to a dog party in a tree at the end. It’s nice and easy for children and a fun bedtime book.

If you’re starting a family of dog lovers, this is a great introduction.

You can get it on Amazon here!

2. All Creatures Great and Small

Cover art for All Creatures Great and Small. A man holds a lamb to his chest in the countryside.
(Photo Credit: St. Martin’s Griffin via Amazon)

James Herriot wrote about his time as a veterinarian in the English countryside during the 1940s in his series of four books. All Creatures Great and Small is my favorite of the series that details his experience learning rural medicine and culture, healing livestock, and exploring the deep connection between people and animals.

But each of these books are filled with stories that range from the hilarious to the cry-worthy. Despite being from a different time, the humor holds up very well, and the stories had me laughing one chapter and sobbing the next.

It’s a great book for you to read a chapter before bed and pick up where you left off later.

You can get it on Amazon here!

3. The Call of the Wild

Cover art for The Call of the Wild. A wolf looks out from a snowy background.
(Photo Credit: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform vai Amazon)

You may have read Jack London’s classic story in school, or you may have pretended that you read it, but you should do yourself a favor and give it another chance. London is an amazing writer, and he manages to make you, the human reader, feel a strong relation to a non-human main character.

Buck the dog doesn’t talk, but he doesn’t need to speak for you to follow his tale. In the story, he’s stolen from his home and sold as a sled dog in Alaska, where he learns to let his wild, natural instincts take over to survive.

It’s an exploration of what separates civilized, domestic life from nature, and whether our wild instincts still lie just below the surface.

You can get it on Amazon here!

4. Where the Red Fern Grows

where the red fern grows
(Picture Credit: Yearling via Amazon)

Here’s another story you may have read in school as an alternative to Old Yeller or Shiloh.

It’s the story of a young boy who works hard to save up his money and buy two Coonhound puppies. He trains them to hunt raccoons, and with the dogs’ complimentary traits, they become the best hunting team in the Ozarks.

It’s a great tale about a boy and his dogs, about growing up, and about loyalty. I won’t spoil the ending to this one, but it’s a great book if you need a good cry.

You can get it on Amazon here!

5. No More Dead Dogs

Cover art for No More Dead Dogs. A German Shepherd lies on his back in front of a yellow background.
(Photo Credit: Hyperion Book CH via Amazon)

If books like Where the Red Fern Grows make you too sad, you probably have a lot in common with Wallace Wallace, the main character in this book. He gets in trouble when he writes a report for class saying he hates books where dogs die at the end.

As punishment, he’s forced to participate in the school play where a dog dies at the end, but he doesn’t take his punishment lying down. Instead, he changes the play into a rock n’ roll opera with rollerblades and a moped.

Gordon Korman, the author of this book, spoke at my middle school when I was a kid. I can tell you he is a hilarious, fantastic storyteller. He had all of us students, the teachers, and even himself laughing.

This book will certainly cheer up the dead dog blues.

You can get it on Amazon here!

What are your favorite dog stories? Can you recommend some great dog books for Book Lovers Day? Let us know in the comments so we can check them out!

Exit mobile version