A border collie puppy makes a strong connection with a traumatized girl.
Ripley is a long way from becoming the fire rescue dog his owner, Ben, believes he can be—and those in charge are skeptical that there’s even a place for a dog at the station. Firefighter Ben needs help with this ball of energy. Ripley, who was rejected by a guide dog program, helps comfort 13-year-old Samantha after a fire, and the two form an instant bond, so Ben hires Samantha and her mom (who ghostwrote a book on dog training) to dog sit while he’s at work. Ripley’s inquisitive and optimistic first-person perspective provides straightforward accounts of both harrowing rescues and the impact on Samantha from her father’s death a few years earlier and the recent fire. Ripley finds his true purpose in comforting Samantha, who struggles with debilitating agoraphobia and anxiety. Will Ripley get to serve as a fire rescue dog, too? Cameron captures Ripley’s emotional awareness of the humans around him in this work that sheds light on a wide range of feelings, in the process teaching readers constructive ways to recognize and address strong emotions. Samantha’s therapist provides concrete treatment suggestions as well. This work, which covers mental health and purposeful living, will appeal to dog lovers. Samantha and Ben are cued white; Ripley describes humans of varying skin tones in the supporting cast. Final art not seen.
Combines therapeutic and comforting elements with daring rescues.
(reading group guide) (Fiction. 8-12)