Beautiful Joe

by Marshall Saunders

Hardcover, 1955

Status

Available

Call number

813.4

Collection

Publication

Whitman Publishing Company (1955), Edition: Modern Abridged Edition, Hardcover, 283 pages

Description

Classic Literature. Fiction. HTML: Pet lovers will cherish this "autobiography" of a special dog from Maine named Beautiful Joe. Subjected to horrible, sadistic abuse at the hands of his original owner, Joe is eventually adopted by a caring family. Despite the terror of his early years, Beautiful Joe overcomes his past and develops an affectionate personality..

Media reviews

Silent Voice
Although it was a good enlightenment on the cruelty of animals it was too exhortative. The story line was clean and well written but many paragraphs could have been excluded and the story would've still had the same effect; take care of your animals and they will return the favor in love and
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adoration. And those who treat their animals with cruelty and selfishness should be punished.
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User reviews

LibraryThing member jopearson56
This is a book I remember loving as a child, and I've long thought to re-read it. I knew the version I read than (and still had) was abridged, so I sought out an unabridged version online and ended up with the Library of Congress Centennial Bestseller edition with an introduction by Roger Caras.
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The book wasn't as compelling as I remember it being, though in its unabriged format, it probably wouldn't have compelled me as a child, either. Well, it might have. My memory of the book is that poor Beautiful Joe suffered much cruelty, and, while he did, that was mostly in the first chapter. Then he was rescued and lived happily ever after as one of the world smartest and most intuitive dogs, reporting on stories of cruelty to OTHER animals and pets he came across and heard about. The stories of routine cruelty were certainly interesting. One of the most interesting things to me was on the inside of the books jacket and in Caras's introduction -- apparently Black Beauty (another childhood favorite, though I think much drier reading today and in its unabridged format -- I should re-read that one, too) and this book were extraordinarily influential in changing the ways in which animal were treated: "There can be no question that both Sewell's and Saunder's landmark books played an important role in furthering public sentiment against cruelty to animals, which in turn gave fresh momentum to the humane movement as it entered the new century." (Both were written in the latter half of the 19th century.)
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LibraryThing member TimBazzett
This is a re-read, of course. I think I first read Beautiful Joe well over 50 years ago. My only beef with Beautiful Joe, reading it now as an adult, might be its rather heavy-handed preaching about cruelty to animals and about the need for kindess in general. Consider, for example, this gentle
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diatribe from a traveler Miss Laura encounters on the train: "Think of the cattle on the western plains. Choked with thirst in summer and starved and frozen in winter. Dehorned and goaded on to trains and steamers. Tossed about and wounded and suffering on voyages. Many of them dying and being thrown into the sea. Others landed sick and frightened. Some of them slaughtered on docks and wharves to keep them from dropping dead in their tracks. What kind of food does their flesh make? It's rank poison. Three of my family have died of cancer. I never eat meat." Maybe some of this "preaching" can be explained by the book's publisher, The American Baptist Publication Society. But no matter, really. It's still a good book, even for this old grey-haired geezer. If you like dogs and if you like a good story, then you'll like this book. And if your kids or grandkids should read it and like it, then dig out those old Jim Kjelgaard Big Red books, or Albert Payson Terhune's Sunnybank collie books, or maybe some of Jack O'Brien's Silver Chief books or James Oliver Curwood's Kazan and Baree. They're all still good reads, fifty, sixty or a hundred years later. Marshall Saunders probably still had that "new" book about Black Beauty freshly in mind when this book was written. It's a canine version of BB, really. But derivative doesn't necessarily mean second rate. This book was first rate in 1893 and it still is today. Read it to your kids/grandkids, or give it to them to read themselves. And tell them about your own excitement when you first read it.
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LibraryThing member yogiclarebear
If you ever felt hard towards an animal or pet, this book will change and soften your heart.

I love the "stories within stories" writing style. I appreciate the practical and non-judgmental approach to the issues of animal rights and humane hunting, slaughter, and livestock farming that the story
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presented.

This is an excellent book.
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LibraryThing member Schmerguls
I read this book when I was in sixth grade, and it made more of an impression on me than most other books. I know the casual attitude I had to animal suffering was utterly changed by reading this book, and on the farm we saw a lot of animal suffering. To the extent I could after reading this book I
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tried to avoid such suffering by animals, especially by our dog and our cats.
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LibraryThing member fuzzi
I had previously read this book as a child, and was looking forward to reading it again.

Boy was I disappointed.

"Beautiful Joe" has a good premise (abused and mutilated dog finds kind home), but the human characters are too preachy, and the entire book is too preachy, all about how we should be kind
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to dumb animals. While I agree we should be kind to animals, that's the entire premise of the book, to the detriment of what could have been a very good story. The situations are contrived and feel "fake".

If you've read "Black Beauty", it's similar in some ways, but I have reread "Black Beauty" and not felt it was so preachy that I wanted to put it down. I did with "Beautiful Joe".

I have no plans to read this book again, and probably will give it to the local thrift store.
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LibraryThing member aleader
Beautiful Joe is the story about an abused dog who finally finds love and a home. It is very emotional and hard in places for a dog lover to read, but it teaches an important lesson in kindness towards animals. It is told from the dog's point of view, which makes a real impression.
LibraryThing member gypsysmom
I loved this story when I was young. It may be the reason I can not stand to see dogs treated cruelly. It tells the story of Joe who was rescued by the Morris family from an inhumane master. It is based on a true story of a dog in Meaford Ontario. Take it and read it and remember to be kind to your
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animals.
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LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
Ugh. The author says they're trying to write another Black Beauty, but what they produced is a sickly-sweet, preachy, over-sentimental, pointless "dog" story. There's no story to it, for one thing - Joe is raised by a mean man and rescued into an animal-loving household...in the first couple
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chapters. Everything else is random stories of his life. It's told in Joe's voice - and sometimes he can talk to other animals and tell and get stories; sometimes they can communicate only in gestures and sniffing, and with little understanding. Again, sometimes he understands long stories told by humans and reacts to them; other times he's completely bewildered by what the humans want, while the reader knows because the humans are telling him over and over what's going on. And repeatedly, the author has characters tell terrible stories of animal mistreatment, while they remind themselves and others not to shock the young woman Joe belongs to - and then they tell her more stories of the same. It's all about preaching to kids that animals should be well taken care of, and never mind making it a good story...so it failed in both intentions and is largely forgotten, unlike Black Beauty. Bleah.
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LibraryThing member Fence
Beautiful Joe is the story of a dog, a mongrel whose first owner abused him, going so far as to chop off his ears and tail. He was rescued and went on to live a much happier life. The author of this story, Margaret Marshall Saunders1 met the real Beautiful Joe while visiting her brother in law and
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his wife, the inspiration for Laura in the book. She was touched by Joe’s story, and having recently read Black Beauty2 decided to write “a dog’s own tale”.

A lot of comparisons to Black Beauty might be made, but to my mind this is much more simply written than Black Beauty, although I suppose I haven’t read that one in a long while. I could be misremembering.

Beautiful Joe is also much more didactic, its main purpose is to highlight the abuses and animal cruelty that were rampant at the time. Different chapters cover different episodes in Joe’s life, and sometimes cover different animals that were mistreated. Many were rescued by the same family that take in Joe, but some don’t get that happy ending. A lot of the dialogue between the characters is about how animals should be treated, and why they should be treated better. The book was originally an entry into a Human Society competition, and that focus is very much in evidence.

I liked a lot about this book, but it is very much of its time, and the author, and the family she writes about are clearly in a position of privilege in society. They may not be the richest, but they certainly don’t have to worry about where the next meal is coming from, and a lot of their attitudes come across as very paternalistic, if only those poor people knew we could cure them. That grated a little on me.

But aside from that it is a certainly a touching story, and any dog lover will probably enjoy it.
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LibraryThing member LibraryCin
3.5 stars

Beautiful Joe was a dog (apparently a real dog) who was abused by his owner (along with his mother and siblings, who were all killed), but was rescued by some local kids after Joe’s owner cut off his ears and tail. Joe hit the jackpot with his new family, especially soft-hearted Miss
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Laura who took good care of Joe and all the other animals the family had. When Miss Laura went off to a relative’s farm for a summer, Joe went with her and learned about the farm animals, as well.

The book was told from Beautiful Joe’s point of view. I enjoyed this (mostly), but it did get preachy at times. I completely agree with it all, but even so, it still felt a bit preachy to me. Many of the characters in the story were almost too good to be true, but at the same time, I think the book (originally published in 1893) was trying to teach kids not to be cruel to animals – they have feelings and feel pain, too. Interesting that it is actually a woman who wrote this: Margaret Marshall Saunders.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1893

Physical description

283 p.; 7.5 inches
Page: 0.2756 seconds