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Book Reviews of The Dogs of Babel

The Dogs of Babel
The Dogs of Babel
Author: Carolyn Parkhurst
ISBN-13: 9780316011037
ISBN-10: 0316011037
Publication Date: 2004
Pages: 288
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 7

3.9 stars, based on 7 ratings
Publisher: Amazon Remainders Account
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

152 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Bookfanatic avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 19
I don't understand why people recommend this book for dog lovers. There's graphic animal abuse and animal torture. A poor sweet dog suffers because its master wants to find out "the truth". Be warned ...this is not a sunny, My Dog Skip kind of story. I wish I hadn't read this book. Needless to say, I was disappointed with the story.
Leigh avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 378 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 16
Despite the downright craziness of the plot, this is a touching an emotionally moving puzzle of a story. I would say that the central motif weaving through the story is language - the language barrier between owner and dog, the unspoken language between husband and wife that harbors secrets, the language spoken in our subconscious that somehow television psychics become attuned to, and the wife's poetic language that works itself from a penultimate, odd act into a real clue into her psyche.

If you're intrigued, give this book some time. You won't need much, as it's a relatively fast read.
Pitasgrandma avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 12
Obviously I'm a minority of one. I hated this book, and I find it amazing that others are recommending it for dog lovers. How maiming and torturing a dog to satisfy one's own self obsession makes it a "touching love story" is beyond me. (And just as a side note, you must have language first in order to form and retrieve memories.)
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 18 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 12
This is an eerie, lovely, scary book all at once. This story will warm and scare one with the power of grief and what a human can do to ruin themselves and others.
momof3chis avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 9
I also don't understand why this book is recommended to dog lovers. There is a vivid, disturbing element about trying to restructure dogs' anatomy so they can talk, which I found very distressing. I'm such a dog lover that I REALLY didn't like this book. It was just too strange & very upsetting. Be warned if you read this that it's not a typical dog-lovers' book.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 65 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 9
This is a very unique book about a man who returns home from work to discover that his wife has died while he's been gone. The only witness to the death is the family dog, so the man attempts to communicate with his dog to discover the reason his beloved wife is no longer with him.

This book is very strange, yet slightly addictive. I couldn't put it down in some parts, but in others, I just wanted to walk away. It's a very intriguing story, and a rather quick read.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 41 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 9
This story was about a woman who suffered from mental illness. I found the book very depressing. It was about her husband's search into the cause of her death and the circumstances surrounding it.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 69 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 7
A beautiful read. By the time I had finished the first page I knew I was going to need to finish the book in one sitting. The characters are carefully developed and the story spins back and forth from the present to the past to slowly spiral to its inevitable conclusion. This is one of those stories that's going to live in my brain forever. If you liked The Time Traveler's Wife, you'll like this one.
katzpawz avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 281 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
This is a very heartfelt, serious look at loss of a loved one.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 11 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
This is a great book. What would you do if the only witness to the love-of-your-life's death was the family dog? Try to teach the dog to speak? Very well-written and believable - not what you'd expect in a book about trying to teach the dog to speak.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 4 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Although the premise is undoubtedly intriguing, I couldn't bring myself to finish this novel. It just didn't really hold any interest for me.
Zydeco avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 80 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
A decent book despite the silly premise.
jillyb85 avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
This book was interesting at first to get into but once I got to the major plot twist I was horrified but at the same time I couldn't stop reading. Once I finished the book I didn't really feel a sense of peace. I felt like there was a heavy stone in the pit of my stomach. I tend to think of characters as real people sometimes and I don't know how I feel about Lexy, I'm angry and upset at her character development.

I see that there are people who either love it or hate it.. I'm more in the middle but this will not be a book that I will want to read again.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 17 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
A most interesting book, written with an amazing twist of intelligence. As one reads it, the the common thought is that it is a sweet story of loss of love and coping with it. However, upon finishing the book, I found myself greatly disturbed, wondering who exactly is the mentally ill, and who is the sane? Upon reading it, you may be able to answer this question for yourself.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 13 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
something akin to the lovely bones, but not as commercially popular. an excellent and intriguing novel.
lilliebette avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 11 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This book, ironically since it is about giving the speechless speech, took my breath away. Parkhurst tackles several subjects, weaving them together to tell a heart breaking but classic story of a man and his dog. After his wife dies, the bereaved husband is stunned. What happened? Was her death truly an accident? Being a linguist, he looks to his dog for answers, embarking (no pun intended) on a frustrating journey. On this journey he discovers a seedy underbelly of men who attempt to give their dogs the ungodly power of speech.

But what is truly stunning about this book is the way Parkhurst portrays grief. Instead of an image of a widower sitting at home or going out and forming meaningless relationships, Parkhurst creates a character who hides his grief in the most impossible task. In this work, he is jumping down a rabbit hole in order to hide from his grief. All he has to do is climb out of it and truly look around his own home to find the answer he needs.

I think this book is ultimately about grieving the loss of someone to depression. What is depression and what forms does it take? Can someone still be highly functional, and yet deeply depressed? When can someone grieving from a loved one lost to depression accept that they are not to blame?

I fear I am not eloquently expressing the beauty of this book. All I can recommend is to read it yourself.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 216 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
A bit sad, but well written. I enjoyed it.
FosterAdopt avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 2
This is a very intresting, emotional read that will stay with you well after you've turned the last page. I really enjoyed it!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Interesting book about a man trying to teach his dog to talk after his wife's death in order to find out what happened to her.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 135 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This is one of the most unusual and memorable books I have ever read. A man's wife is dead, having fallen out of a tree. Did she fall or did she jump? The only witness was her dog. The grieving widower sets out to see if he can't teach the dog to communicate with him, to tell him. Very, very likeable characters. Great read.
quackers avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 45 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
The Dogs of Babel is a very touching book about coping with the death of a loved one, as well as a mystery about how that death happened. Reading the description, I expected this to be more of a story about the bond between people and dogs, or the relationship between Paul and his dog, Lorelei, but that turned out to be more of a side plot.

Although the book was an intense and quick read, I had hoped for a positive, maybe even magical, ending and was disappointed when the mystery was resolved.

Overall, this is a bittersweet story about love and loss. If you read it expecting a happy or wonderous resolution, you will be disappointed.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 40 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Strange but beautiful and very moving. this novel ask us to look at the puzzle that is grief and the puzzle that is love
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 33 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Sad but interesting soriy about how the main character tried to get his dog to converse and tell him about how and why his wife died. The main character is so comsumed with "why" that he will try any means to find out. Since the dog was the only witness that day, he tries through various methods to teach the dog to converse in an understandable language. Although his friends feel this is far fetched, there are several successfull studies that the character uses to show that if can be done. But it also shows a different side of human nature and animal cruelty that I found offensive.
rainbowbrite98 avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 2
Very interesting plot, even though it is a bit disturbing. Being an animal lover, it was a bit sad for me.

The book was sad all the way around, but adding the element of dog mutilation and I almost cried a few times. It's worth the read.
Cabanachat avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This mess doesn't simply disappoint me, it angers me. I'd say I finish most every book I start, no matter how awful. Less than one out of twenty reads will I find impossible to complete. But I loathed this book so much I have to create a new category: Books I finished accidentally, since I couldn't stop thinking "It Can't Get Any Worse!" but, nonetheless, DO. If it presented itself as nothing more than a trite pulp romance, then it would bug me much less than it does. It comes, however, smugly trumpeting its depth while displaying a profundity about as vast as the palate offered by some run-down chain restaurant in a decaying suburban strip mall. Complete with the least-convincingly-male narrator I've ever come across, its shallow attempts to portray a bohemian central character's âquirksâ as ominously inevitable signs of underlying, ultimately fatal, mental illness read like an Onion-style satire of banality masquerading as insight. The writing is not only just terrible, it's incompetence clearly believing its own alleged brilliance. To add insult to injury, the supposed âmysteryâ is âsolvedâ by something the narrator has known all along, but is conveniently withheld until one of the most tritely shoehorned plots in decades demands its revelation in order to bring this self-indulgent tripe to a close. Inexplicably, this book arrives highly recommended by some pretty impressive people whose taste (and/or sobriety while reading) must now all be called into question by default. Just. Astoundingly. Bad.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I loved this book becouse it was so different,worth a read this summer.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 140 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This was a very interesting book. Different from anything I've ever read. I would definitely recommend it to everyone! His wife dies from a fall from the top of a tree in the back yard. He has lots of questions - why was she in the tree? Did she jump on purpose? Was it an accident? Only her dog was there to witness the event, so he decides to teach his dog to talk so that he can find out what happened.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 14 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This book was very unusual and very moving.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 31 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I bought this book, simply becasue I LOVE DOGS. This is a story about a man who so adored his wife that he tried to teach the only eye witness to her suicide, her dog, to talk so he could learn why she did it. Does he succede? Yes and no.
Bonnie avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 422 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Very different plot...a man, a linguist, is going to teach his dog to talk as the dog was the only witness to his wife's suspicious death. Could have been very hokey, this premise, but instead it was serious, sad, and worked out just the way it should have. I recommend this book.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 36 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
After finishing this book, I went into such a funk. Had I seen a Hallmark commercial of any kind, I probably would have started bawling.

However, this is not to say that this book isn't fantastic. It absolutely is. This book made me think and it touched me in an obvious way. This is a quite a different reaction from many of the other books I have read, which are often meaningless ways to pass some time.

This is a story about an incredibly deep romance between two people. The two participants are so different, but yet they bring out the best in each other. We find out about this romance after tragedy has struck.

As you are reading a review of the book, you know that the story occurs after the death of Paul's wife Lexy and that he is seeking meaning to her death. So, the book is also largely about grief and recovering from it.

I didn't want this book to end, and I read it in an afternoon. It was fantastic, hope you enjoy it too!!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This is a beautifully written love story and a mystery. A young husband tries to uncover the reason for his wife's death. This is a huge task considering that the sole witness was the couple's dog! This is a really unusual story, but one that should definately be read.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Even though this book is a little sad I really enjoyed it. It is about a man who's wife is found dead by a tree in the backyard. The question is brought forth accident or suicide? The only witness to her death was her Rhodesian Ridgeback, Lorlei. In his grief, the man decides he is going to teach the dog to speak so that he can find out what really happened to his wife. Without revealing the story, it will suffice to say that in the end he does find out what lead to his wife's death. This story leaves you with a feeling that maybe you don't know the people in your life as well as you think you do. It also makes you think about your own masks that you wear everyday... The book explores the husbands reactions to his loss and his groping their past lives for answers.
Suzyjal avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 21 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I picked it up this book and saw that it was about a grieving young man who wants to find out the nature of his wife's death, by teaching his dog (the only witness) to talk.
I know, I know, that's what I said. Weird! So I was intrigued, not by the premise, but by wondering just how the author was going to pull this one off!
She did a good job! The book was well written, and there were several flashbacks which took us back to the relationship of the couple in all of it's stages. I loved the charecters, I loved the dog. It was a love story, and a mystery all rolled into one. Pick it up.
chemfemme66 avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I wasn't sure if I liked this book after I read it, but it stuck in my brain, so I reread it about a year later. A touching look at how people deal with grief and pain, looking to the outside so they don't have to acknowledge what they know on the inside.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I enjoyed this book--it was a bit different, but interesting. I think you might enjoy it, too!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I found the whole premise of trying to force a dog to talk - and the secret society involved in this theory - a little sickening. I suppose it shows the depth of a man's grief over the loss of his wife. It was off-putting. Not one of my favorites.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 412 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Not really my thing, but an interesting novel nonetheless.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 22 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Interesting story, but left me going, "Huh?" Good read, but not a great book. The theory kind of makes you wonder where people get this stuff! Teaching a dog to talk???
kermitreads avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 53 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I agree that this book is neither a love story nor a good book for dog lovers. Sort of more a mystery about a weak woman's way out of a lovely life. Still a decent read but happy by no means.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 1
Interesting and poignent story of love and loss.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 22 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I loved this book. It was warm and positive yet melancholy. Very touching story.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 14 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I loved this book - touching and wonderful.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 112 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
You have got to read this book. This guy wants to teach his dog to talk, because the dog is the only witness to his wifes death, and he wants the dog to be able to tell him what happened. Amazing story. Wonderfully written. Very entertaining.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A moving story of love and loss. I really enjoyed it.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 29 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I liked it as a book, but parts of the story were disturbing in regard to how dogs were treated. Just kept reminding myself that it was fiction. A bit far-out with some of the ideas. A quick read and hard to put down after the first page.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 8 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Another tear jerker, but a good, quick read.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 1
I wouldn't exactly call this a love story, but I can't really classify it under anything else. It sort of needs a category of its own, and that's why I find it so intriguing. This book is unique, and though it's not the best book I've ever read, it's pretty much the most interesting, different, and therefore worthwhile novel I've read in a while.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This was a short, fast read. I really enjoyed the beginning, but soon found myself wondering how and why this couple came together and then stayed together. They both had their own issues which became more clear as the book progressed. It was well written, but it did leave me shaking my head.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 134 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A beautiful but quick read, really pulls you into the character's relationships. The writing was excellent and the plot, while at times disturbing, was well-developed throughout; an emotional and unusual book.
angiem avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 13 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Excellent read
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 65 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
What a disappointment. The author follows one path for the majority of the book and then abandons it in the end. Unnecessary images of dogs suffering. No real suspense. A total let down.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I liked this book but I did keep putting it down. It didn't truly hold my attention until I got half way through. I think the book was sad overall, and frustrating, I wanted to know the answer to his wives death as much as he did. That is why I gave it 4 stars. It did have some plot twists that were interesting and some that were disturbing. If you are sensitive about animals I do not recommend this book there is some animal abuse that has stayed with me unfortunetley.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 20 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A touching story about a man so grieved by his wife's unexpected death that he'll grasp at any hope, realistic or not, to unearth the truth about her final days.
LoveNE avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 40 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
The book gives an interesting look into life,death, and grief. Kept my attention...
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Loved the start of the book; was not able to finish because it got too deep for me at that time.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 30 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Outrageous but gripping story of a man trying to get vital information out of his dog regarding his wife's death.Bizarre but enjoyable
Crazyncute923 avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 1
What do I think of this book? The honest answer is I simply don't know. I know that seems odd but I can't really decide whether I liked it or not. As a huge animal lover I was mortified at the abuse in this book (not by the main character) and many times wanted to stop reading. However, I found myself drawn into the book and couldn't put it down. I stayed up until 5 in the morning just to finish because I HAD to know what happen next and how the story would end. This book takes you into the minds of disturbed people and fills your head with images of very cruel abuse towards the dogs. At the same time you can feel the main character's grief at the loss of his wife. The author does to a great job at bringing his pain to life.

Would I recommend this book to someone? The answer is again, I don't know. If you are interested in what I have said then read the book but be warned that it is NOT a happy story.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 8 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book is not what I thought it would be. I expected a forensic novel about solving a murder. What I got was a weird, twisted book about grief and animal torture. I selected this book for our book group and was embarrassed to have done so! Not recommended.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Haunting, beautiful, wrenching. It will break your heart.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A wonderful story of a man coming to terms with his wife's death by attempting to teach his dog to speak. The way the author intermixes the couple's past history and his present without her was moving. You can feel his pain and desparation to find answers about her death. Beautifully written and a definite must read.
CindyBear avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 26 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This is the kind of book that sticks with you long after you read it. While it is not what I would call a book for "dog lover's", the main character definately loves and cares for his dog. However, the book's main focal point is not dogs, but rather languages and the things that are left unspoken. It is about the masks we sometimes wear to shield ourselves from the world and the ones we love. It is about mental illness, grief, loss, devotion, and love. It is a mystery if you let your mind wander there, although one could argue the truth was there all along. You are taken on an emotional journey with Paul, as he recalls his life with Lexy. The book is at times romantic, puzzling, and even has times of suspense. A great read.
teacharrgh avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 28 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book is one of my favorite reads of the decade! Parkhurst captures grief, the desperation of a husband who loses his wife, so beautifully. It was a tough read. As one reviewer pointed out, there is graphic animal abuse/torture. However, it is an integral part of the story.
brandyjp avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 58 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book is a very intense and heartfelt look at loss and the search for answers. Not a light read, but good from beginning to end. I can't believe how much I enjoyed this. The premise sounded so ludicrious and, to be honest, still does, but there is something so much more to this book than the silly-sounding plot. It is a story of love and loss, of understanding and confusion, of masks and bare truth. At times I laughed out loud and at least once I felt my eyes prick with the hint of tears. Excellent, indeed
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 1
Very unique storyline, enjoyed very much.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 1
Did not enjoy reading this book...I had to force myself to finish it.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Helpful Score: 1
Amateurish drivel! Author's voices for characters aren't very well distinguished, overly simplistic stereotypes, thin plot... Pop romance fiction yes. Literature-No. This is like really bad YA fiction.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 66 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A haunting story. It will stay with you...
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really enjoyed this book--had a hard time putting it down. I was completely caught up in the world of the main character as he unravels the mystery of his wife's death. Beautiful and compelling.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 14 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I was a bit disappointed with the plot, because I guess I was reading it thinking it was more so a mystery with a big "ah-ha" moment. The author is so descriptive it kept me interested in reading it all the way through though.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 50 more book reviews
***** This book will break your heart and mend it again. It is filled with such insight and longing. You may be tempted to put it down at some point, unfinished but DON'T!!!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
My book club was split in two on this book. Some (like me) absoultely adored it. Others thought it bizarre. Interestingly, what divided the two groups was grief - those who have experienced a deep grief in their lives will understand The Dogs of Babel.
Bootsie avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 34 more book reviews
Surprise ending makes reader wonder if we ever really know another person.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 8 more book reviews
A heartwarming tale of a man's quest to use the only witness (his dog) to his wife's death to solve the mystery and bring him closure. It's both touching and funny.
jeepers avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 35 more book reviews
This is a book that will stay with me a long time. There is sadness, humor, mystery and suspense. Most importantly it is a story of healing and acceptance. Carolyn Parkhurst skillfully moves Paul, the main character, along with the reader through the process of recovering from the sudden and shocking death of his wife. I was very moved by this book and recommend it highly.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 6 more book reviews
A really surprising story that touches upon love, grief, marriage and mystery.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
I read this book and loved it! It was kind of querky, but a great read and an ending I didn't expect! My 30 year old daughter loved it too. Lynn Bryan. Greenville, NC
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 10 more book reviews
This was an excellent read! A strange, unique, and poignant work of fiction but very believably real. I can certainly understand why it was a National Bestseller!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 6 more book reviews
Real creepy subject matter, not lighthearted like I expected at all....
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 117 more book reviews
Such an interesting and entertaining read about a man trying to teach his dog to speak so that the dog can tell the man what happened on the day that the man's wife fell from a tree to her death. A mystery, a love story, an original.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 32 more book reviews
A strange creepy story - it gave me weird dreams.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
I really couldn't get into this book. I tried three different times.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 44 more book reviews
I loved this book. It is a bit macabre (like Lovely Bones) and I could not put it down.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 11 more book reviews
This was a delightful tale of love and how a husband comes to terms with the questionable circumstances of the death of his wife.

It was a relatively quick read, but I really enjoyed it. A very different subject matter than I am accustomed to reading. But a great break from the genre I typically read.

I highly recommend, regardless of the type of books one reads!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
I read this book years ago for book club--I had nightmares about it for months. This book is creepy and disturbing
Froggie avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 55 more book reviews
I loved this book! It was very sad but I couldn't put it down. I really needed to knwo what happen to his wife. Only the dog was witness and its not talking!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 30 more book reviews
This book is very intriguing. The author develops the characters in a fluid, dynamic way. The twist in the story is very powerful and handled exceptionally well.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 3 more book reviews
This book is a easy read, flows well, and deals with the lost of a loved one thru the eyes of a widower. At times it is predictable.
cesprinces avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 32 more book reviews
I enjoyed this book. It did have a couple of odd twists. Overall it was a quick read, especially for anyone who is a dog lover.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
I loved this book! It was so beautifully written and touching. We are able to learn about how complicated Paul's grief is, and we follow him on all the twists and turns of living with Lexy.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 16 more book reviews
The book is rather whimsical despite the tragedy of the wife's death.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 82 more book reviews
Very interesting,sad book
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 113 more book reviews
Fascinating topic - almost like a mystery, but with a twist.
Tx-Blaize avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 29 more book reviews
"Paul Iverson's Life Changes in an instant. He returns home one day to find that his wife, Lexy, has died under strange circumstances. The only witness was their dog, Lorelei, whose anguished barking brought help to the scene-but too late. In the days and weeks that follow, Paul begins to notice strange "clues" in their home: books rearranged on their shelves, a mysterious phone call, and other suggestions that nothing about Lexy's last afternoon was quite what it seemed. Reeling from grief, Paul is determined to decipher this evidence and unlock the mystery of her death. But he can't do it alone; he needs Lorelei's help." - worldcat.org
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 70 more book reviews
Very original book. Interesting view into a marriage.
ElleS avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 112 more book reviews
A quirky read by worth it!

Very enjoyable!

Ellen
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 54 more book reviews
Finished the book in one sitting. Odd, but compelling. Worth reading.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 35 more book reviews
for lovers and dog-lovers. unique story you're sure to remember.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 58 more book reviews
This is really a good book. I got it by mistake and decided to read some and then couldn't put it down. Really enjoyed it
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 88 more book reviews
Wonderful book about love,loss and the desperation one feels being left behind without the answer to why. Another one I couldn't put down.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
It has been a couple years since I read the book, but I remember after I finished it I was not satisfied with the plot. The storyline seem to go nowhere.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 33 more book reviews
Not what I expected, but I really enjoyed this book.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
Really great book. Wish I had picked it for book club. Graphic animal abuse is a bit tough to get through.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 1452 more book reviews
Can one really find a soulmate? It happened to Paul and Lexy. One look at each other and the magic began. On the first date they travel to Disney World and spend days beginning to know one another. Their love blooms until they marry and begin life together with Lexy's dog, Lorelie. Paul is a linguist and Lexy an artist who makes beautiful masks. They create unusual times to spend time together and show their love.

One day, Paul returns home to find a police car parked in front of their house. Lexy has fallen from their apple tree and broken her neck. He is devastated. Grief consumes him as he tries to determine what happened. Ruled an accident, Paul wonders. The only witness was Lorelie. Can he teach her to talk and tell him how Lexy fell? Taking a sabbatical, he is determined to try. His attempts meet with little success and he encounters a strange group that does cruel surgery on dogs attempting to create talking dogs. Their efforts are deplored by society but he attends a meeting which leaves him shaken. Reflecting on his attempts to teach Lorelie to talk he realizes that such efforts are in vain. His grief is still there but he knows it's time to learn how to live again. He was lucky to have the beautiful Lexy as a part of his life as long as he did.
staceyreader avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 56 more book reviews
This was interesting story about a man whose wife dies and it is put down in the books as an accident. But he is not so sure. With the dog as the only witness to her death, he decides he is going to try to teach the dog to talk so that she can tell him how his wife really died. Woven into the story is also "their story". Good book.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
Found this to be extremely imaginative. The idea that a dog could talk was only the beginning. One fantastic creation after another. Fresh and innovative. Good read and well presented.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 9 more book reviews
The story line of this book is so far off the charts, it is worth the read.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 72 more book reviews
Good book quite different
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 2 more book reviews
I really loved this book. Although I was a little skeptical on the storyline, I was amazed how well it was handled. It is really a touching book for people who love animals as well as people who do not.
Bonnie avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 422 more book reviews
I never expected what happened. He's a linguist, he's going to teach the dog to talk...an interesting horror/mystery book, perhaps. No, it was not. It was a page-turning story of love, loss, anger, disappointment. And then acceptance. It did not go the way I imagined, and for that I am very appreciative of the author. A wonderful read.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 26 more book reviews
Advance Reading copy
Granites2001 avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 88 more book reviews
Very good read, but sad!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 90 more book reviews
poignant and unforgettable story
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
The mysterious death of a man's wife leads him to try to learn the language of the witness, his wife's dog. A great read.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 10 more book reviews
Moving, original novel
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 30 more book reviews
This was an intriguing and touching mystery about a man whose wife has died with only one witness- their dog. He tries everything to teach the dog to talk and to determine what really happened to his wife. It sounds like an odd premise for a book, but the love story that was interwoven into the story was quite touching.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on
Very moving story, full of sadness and interesting thought.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 43 more book reviews
I am sure there are people out there who loved this book, but it was just not for me.

I didn't care for the depression it pulled me into (as the whole story is steeped in it), the main character, the writing style or the story itself.
One book I wish I never would have picked up!
Stephany avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 19 more book reviews
The Dogs of Babel, is original enough: after his wife Lexy dies after falling from a tree, linguistics professor Paul Iverson becomes obsessed with teaching their dog, a Rhodesian Ridgeback named Lorelei (the sole witness to the tragedy), to speak so he can find out the truth about Lexy's death--was it accidental or did Lexy commit suicide?
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 75 more book reviews
How does one write a tale about love, enveloping grief and a linguist trying to teach his dog to talk? Incredible and really good.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 283 more book reviews
This was a great book, especially for dog lovers. I love dogs and I really enjoyed this book.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 9 more book reviews
I know I'm in the minority, but I didn't care for this one at all.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 10 more book reviews
Good and worthwhile read!
galnsearch avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 143 more book reviews
Very strange book about a man trying to teach his dog to talk because the dog was the only witness to his wife's death. It keeps your attention.

Donna V.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 2 more book reviews
I loved this book. A nice summertime read!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 58 more book reviews
This book drags at first but then picks up and holds your interest
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 25 more book reviews
This book is a wonderful stretch of the imagination... quite engaging and a great story of this man and his dog.
Cheryl-Sam avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 39 more book reviews
I know this book got all kinds of great reviews but I just thought this book was strange. The whole concept was bizarre. The book is basically about some wacko who tries to give dogs the ability to speak. I can't say I enjoyed this one. Some things are better left unread.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 48 more book reviews
Sad, funny, romantic, unusual....this book has it all!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 130 more book reviews
Unusual story that I enjoyed very much!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 10 more book reviews
Tells the story of a man's quest to solve the mystery of his wife's death with the help of the only witness: their dog Lorelei.

Loved this book! May sound a bit weird,but it was a very sweet story.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 22 more book reviews
I've had this book on my shelf for a while, and always found something I thought would be more interesting to read. The title just didn't draw me in. But as I got into this book, I realized that I was enjoying reading about the lives of the main characters. The husband is grieving and trying to figure out why his wife was found dead after falling from an apple tree in their back yard. The only observer? Their dog Lorelei. As is sometimes the case in extreme grief, he does some things that make little sense and which have his colleagues shaking their heads. But the book is surprisingly well written and insightful.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 2 more book reviews
Very intersting book, was handed to me by anonymous person, and turned out to be a very very great find.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 4 more book reviews
Wow...a really good book!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 6 more book reviews
Interesting and quick read.
berries674 avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 92 more book reviews
Great book...strange, but fathomable for animal lovers. Great main character development (esp. Lexy's) and homage to the intelligence of the family pet. This was suspenseful and intriguing, a quick read...
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 51 more book reviews
I enjoyed this book very much. I recommend reading it!!!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 12 more book reviews
Interesting book.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 367 more book reviews
When his wife dies in a fall from a tree in their backyard, linguist Paul Iverson is wild with despair. In the days that follow, Paul becomes certain that Lexy's death was no accident. Strange clues have been left behind: unique, personal messages that only she could have left and that he is determined to decipher. So begins Paul's fantastic and even perilous search for the truth, as he abandons his everyday life to embark on a series of experiments designed to teach his dog Lorelei to communicate. Is this the project of a madman? Or does Lorelei really have something to tell him about the last afternoon of a woman he only thought he knew?....
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 3 more book reviews
a widow and his wife's dog
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At first, seemed too simple of a story, guy looses he wife who fell from a tree in their yard, but develops into him learning that she killed herself. She was pregnant but couldn't handle it. A woman with many mental issues that he comes to finally undestand.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 5 more book reviews
The Dogs of Babel is a very interesting read about a man whose wife kills herself and the dog is the only witness. This is a good book about grief, love, and the love of animals.
k9kutter64 avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 167 more book reviews
Loved it!
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 240 more book reviews
The story of a man's quest to solve the mystery of his wife's death with the help of the only witness: their dog, Lorelei.
xserafinx avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 78 more book reviews
The quirky premise of Carolyn Parkhurst's debut novel, The Dogs of Babel, is original enough: after his wife Lexy dies after falling from a tree, linguistics professor Paul Iverson becomes obsessed with teaching their dog, a Rhodesian Ridgeback named Lorelei (the sole witness to the tragedy), to speak so he can find out the truth about Lexy's death--was it accidental or did Lexy commit suicide?
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 279 more book reviews
Good story
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 14 more book reviews
loved this
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 134 more book reviews
When his wife dies in a fall from a tree in their backyard, linguist Paul Iverson is wild with despair. In the days that follow, Paul becomes certain that Lexy's death was no accident. Strange clues have been left behind: unique, personal messages that only she could have left and that he is determined to decipher. So begins Paul's fantastic and even perilous search for the truth, as he abandons his everyday life to embark on a series of experiments designed to teach his dog Lorelei to communicate. Is this the project of a madman? Or does Lorelei really have something to tell him about the last afternoon of a woman he only thought he knew? At the same time, Paul obsessively recalls the early days of his love for Lexy and the ups and downs of life with the brilliant, sometimes unsettling woman who became his wife.
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How did his wife die so mysteriously and can thier dog tell him?
mitzilsg avatar reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 60 more book reviews
Paul Iverson's life changes in an instant. He returns home one day to find that his wife has died under strange circumstances. The only witness was their dog, whose anguished barking brought help to the scene - but too late. Paul starts an investigation that leads him in unexpected and even perilous directions. This is a story of marriage, love, relationships, survival and devotion.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 237 more book reviews
PAUL IVERSIN'S LIFE CHANGES IN AN INSTANT. HE RETURNS HOME ONE DAY TO FIND THAT HIS WIFE, LEXY, HAS DIED UNDER STRANGE CIRCIMSTANCES. THE ONLY WITNESS WAS THEIR DOG, LORELEI, WHOSE ANGUISHED BARKING BROUGHT HELP TO THE SCENCE-BUT TOO LATE.
reviewed The Dogs of Babel on + 3 more book reviews
Missing the book jacket.