<p>'Absolute heaven.' <strong>Jilly Cooper</strong></p>
<p>‘<em>The Year of the Dog</em> is SUCH a gorgeous book, I can’t imagine anyone reading this and not loving it. By turns hilarious, entertaining and heartbreakingly honest, it’s an unforgettable love story you’ll want to buy for all your friends. I’m already waiting for the sequel!’ <strong>Jill Mansell</strong></p>
<p>‘Tender, hilarious and moving.’ <strong>Daisy Buchanan</strong></p>
<p>‘This made me laugh like a drain on a packed Underground commute, and I haven’t even got a dog.’ <strong>Andrew Hunter Murray </strong></p>
<p>‘Extremely funny, deeply charming.’ <strong>India Knight</strong></p>

‘Absolute heaven.’ Jilly Cooper

A hilarious and heartfelt year following one woman and her puppy – from chaos and tears to healing and new beginnings. It’s a love story, but not as you know it.

Raising a puppy is simple: feed them, walk them, love them. Right? Wrong.

Armed with Pinterest-perfect plans and firm ideas about training, Sophia brings Dennis – a scruffy and defiant Parson terrier – into her life. But just as the puppy pads hit the floor, the rest of her world falls apart.

Suddenly single and quietly unravelling, Sophia finds herself solo parenting a tiny, gleeful agent of chaos who devours foam earplugs, destroys her shoes, and has an alarming taste for spiders. He’s also the only thing keeping her afloat.

As the months roll by in a haze of dodgy first dates, sleepless nights and meltdowns in the park, Sophia begins to make sense of it all: the grief of a life that didn’t go to plan, the weirdness of being single in your late thirties, and the surprising ways love shows up when you least expect it.

By the end of their first year together, Dennis hasn’t just wrecked the furniture — he’s quietly rebuilt her life.

For anyone who’s ever been through shattering heartbreak, this is a story of quiet resilience, unpredictable joy, and the quiet wonder of a small body curled beside you when it matters most.

Les mer
‘Absolute heaven.’ Jilly Cooper

A hilarious and heartfelt year following one woman and her puppy – from chaos and tears to healing and new beginnings. It’s a love story, but not as you know it.

Les mer

A new, wildly funny memoir for 2026 of life and love in your thirties – complete with heartbreak, bad dates, baby fever and one very naughty puppy

A new, wildly funny memoir for 2026 of life and love in your thirties – complete with heartbreak, bad dates, baby fever and one very naughty puppy

With dog ownership at an all-time high, readers are hungrier than ever for stories about our beloved four-legged companions.

A funny, tender account of Sophia’s year spent raising a puppy – think Bridget Jones with a dog.

Beneath the laughs and shredded slippers lies a deeply relatable story of modern adulthood – touching on singlehood, heartbreak, fertility, ageing parents and the messy, beautiful reality of your thirties.

Sophia Money-Coutts is the bestselling author of six novels, with a loyal readership and consistent critical acclaim.

Sophia is incredibly well-connected – she was Features Director at Tatler for five years, and writes a weekly column for The Sunday Telegraph called ‘Modern Manners’.

She has 15k+ followers on Instagram @sophiamcoutts, and a thriving Substack newsletter (Onwards and Sideways) with 4,000+ subscribers.

A stylish hardback with original illustrations – this is the perfect gift.

Competition: People Who Like Dogs Like People Who Like Dogs; Everybody Died, So I Got A Dog; Went to London, Took the Dog; Dog-Hearted; Lost Dog; The Diary of a Bookseller; You Had Me at Woof; Marley and Me. By; Nick Duerden; Emily Dean; Nina Stibbe; Rowan Hisayo-Buchanan; Kate Spicer; Shaun Bythell; Julie Klam; John Grogan

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780008744038
Publisert
2025-10-23
Utgiver
HarperCollins Publishers
Vekt
300 gr
Høyde
204 mm
Bredde
135 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
224

Biografisk notat

Sophia Money-Coutts is a journalist and author who spent five years working as Features Director at Tatler. Prior to that she worked as a writer and an editor for the Evening Standard and the Daily Mail in London, and The National in Abu Dhabi. She writes the Modern Manners column for The Sunday Telegraph.