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Book on PA puppy mills set for release March 2010 Print E-mail

SAVING GRACIE

How One Dog Escaped The Shadowy World Of American Puppy Mills

By award-winning journalistCarol Bradley

A compelling true story of one dog’s rescue from a Pennsylvania puppy mill

SAVING GRACIE (Howell Book House; Hardcover; $21.99; March 2010) chronicles how one little dog is transformed from a bedraggled animal worn out from bearing puppies into a loving, healthy member of her new family; and how her owner, Linda Jackson, is changed from a person who barely tolerated dogs to a woman passionately determined not only to save Gracie’s life, but also to get the word out about the millions of American puppy mill dogs who need our help.

Puppy mills have been around for decades and are one of America’s most shameful secrets. It is a hidden world of substandard kennels, where dogs are caged like chickens and forced to produce puppies over and over, until they can produce no more.

SAVING GRACIE traces this resilient dog’s journey out of a puppy mill, and tells the stories of the people who helped her along the way: from Cheryl Shaw, the humane society police officer who raided her kennel; to Lori Finnegan, the prosecutor who took Gracie’s breeder to court; to Pam Bair, who cared for Gracie in a shelter; and finally to Linda Jackson, the woman who gave her a permanent home.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

CAROL BRADLEY is an award-winning former newspaper reporter who spent 26 years covering the U.S. Congress and state legislatures in Tennessee and New York and writing features and investigative stories in Montana. She studied Animal Law as a 2004 Nieman Fellow at Harvard. She has written about many aspects of animal welfare, including horse slaughtering, rodeos, animal hoarding, and animal cruelty. Carol resides in Great Falls, Montana.

For further information please visit CarolBradley.com

Great Falls author's debut book reveals horrors of puppy mills

By ERIN MADISON • Tribune Staff Writer • February 26, 2010

Gracie, a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, was by no means a picture-perfect dog when she was saved from a Pennsylvania puppy mill.

She spent the first six years of her life in a cage, breeding litter after litter of puppies.

When authorities raided the kennel where she lived, the dog with short dry hair, one bulged out eye and drooping nipples found her way to an adoptive home.

Gracie turned out to be the perfect dog to help expose the horrific world of commercial dog breeding, or puppy mills.

Carol Bradley's new book, "Saving Gracie, How One Dog Escaped the Shadowy World of American Puppy Mills," chronicles Gracie's life from her time as a breeding dog through her eventual adoption by a loving family and transformation into a healthy, happy animal.

"Saving Gracie" is the first book for Bradley, a Great Falls resident and former Great Falls Tribune reporter. The book officially publishes Monday but is already available on Amazon.com.

Bradley hasn't always been a dog lover. In 2002 while working for the Tribune, she covered a case in which collie breeder Athena Lethcoe-Harman and her husband were charged with multiple counts of animal cruelty when they tried to transport their kennel of 180 dogs from Alaska to Arizona and were stopped at the border north of Shelby. For nine months, while the Harmans faced prosecution, the collies stayed in Shelby and later in Great Falls under the care of dozens of volunteers.

"It opened my eyes to the widespread existence of puppy mills and to the cost, both in real dollars and human effort, required to salvage their victims," Bradley writes in the introduction to "Saving Gracie."

After the case ended, Bradley studied animal law during a fellowship at Harvard. All the while she kept thinking about Camp Collie and the widespread problem of puppy mills.

"I just couldn't get this out of my mind," Bradley said in a recent interview. "I was struck by the fact that there was this whole underbelly of dog breeders that I was not aware of."

Her original idea was an expose filled with the gut-wrenching details about the large puppy mills that operate across the country.

Puppy mills have been found with more than 1,000 dogs. Breeding dogs spend years in those kennels, often living in cages, covered in filth and producing a litter of puppies every six months. Those puppies are sold to distributors who sell them to pet stores or over the Internet.

"I started off thinking I would write your basic angry manifesto," Bradley said.

When she pitched that plan to agents at a 2007 writing workshop in New York, she got the same feedback from each agent — good topic, but too grim. They told her she would need a character or a plotline, something the reader could follow as they learned about the problem of commercial dog breading along the way.

That's where Gracie came in.

Of the book's 20 chapters, 17 follow Gracie, the raid on her kennel, the prosecution of the breeder and Gracie's transition to normal dog life after her adoption. The other three chapters focus on the broader issue of puppy mills.

Bradley chose to focus on a puppy mill in Pennsylvania, where the state recently changed its laws to prevent unhealthy kennels.

"At the time, Pennsylvania was kind of the perfect storm for this issue," she said.

She chose Gracie because she wanted to profile a dog that had spent much of its life as a victim of a puppy mill. She also wanted an owner who wasn't the perfect dog lover, but instead was changed by adopting a dog.

Gracie's owner was reluctant to get a dog, giving in because her children begged and pleaded for the pet.

"Gracie really wound up changing her life," Bradley said.

Bradley spent four years writing and researching the book, along with learning how to be successful in the world of publishing.

She traveled to Pennsylvania twice and spent time with Gracie and her family, the Humane Society officer who raided Gracie's kennel, the attorney who prosecuted the case and the woman who ran the shelter where Gracie stayed during her breeder's trial.

Bradley hopes her book raises awareness of a problem that few people realize exist.

Dogs have become such an important part of many families and people spend millions on their dogs every year, she said.

"But yet behind the scenes this unbelievable squalor exists and people need to know about that."