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Sign up todayOur Oldest Companions
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Learn moreHow did the dog become manโs best friend? A celebrated anthropologist unearths the mysterious origins of the unique partnership that rewrote the history of both species.
Dogs and humans have been inseparable for more than 40,000 years. The relationship has proved to be a pivotal development in our evolutionary history. The same is also true for our canine friends; our connection with them has had much to do with their essential nature and survival. How and why did humans and dogs find their futures together, and how have these close companions (literally) shaped each other? Award-winning anthropologist Pat Shipman finds answers in prehistory and the present day.
In Our Oldest Companions, Shipman untangles the genetic and archaeological evidence of the first dogs. She follows the trail of the wolf-dog, neither prehistoric wolf nor modern dog, whose bones offer tantalizing clues about the earliest stages of domestication. She considers the enigma of the dingo, not quite domesticated yet not entirely wild, who has lived intimately with humans for thousands of years while actively resisting control or training. Shipman tells how scientists are shedding new light on the origins of the unique relationship between our two species, revealing how deep bonds formed between humans and canines as our guardians, playmates, shepherds, and hunters.
Along the journey together, dogs have changed physically, behaviorally, and emotionally, as humans too have been transformed. Dogsโ labor dramatically expanded the range of human capability, altering our diets and habitats and contributing to our very survival. Shipman proves that we cannot understand our own history as a species without recognizing the central role that dogs have played in it.
Pat Shipman is the author of many books, includingย The Invaders andย The Animal Connection, as well as The Ape in the Tree, co-authored with Alan Walker, which won the W. W. Howells Award from the American Anthropological Association. Taking Wing won the Phi Beta Kappa Award in science and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. She is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Royal Geographical Society of London.
Kate Mulligan has acted with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival for more than ten seasons in productions including Hairspray, Alice in Wonderland, and Sense and Sensibility. Her film and television work includes Being John Malkovich and Itโs Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
Reviews
โThis book, like the dogs that are at its center, covers all the continents where modern people have lived with them. Read it. You will enjoy it.โ
โThis book is a great readโฆand brings the human and canid settlement of the Australian region into a global context.โ
โA must-read, a tour de force drawing together under one proverbial roof what science can tell us to date.โ
โPat Shipman is a respected paleoanthropologist and a superb science writer with an extraordinary reach.โ
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