Life with Nicholas
by
Book Details
About the Book
The story of Nicholas gets into more than just Nicholas. It also tells about some of the different animals that entered the Kyler household over a span of many years. It also gets into comparing animal episodes with human episodes. We can learn so much from animals! Nicholas was our second miniature Schnauzer. He entered our household over my own inner rebellion. I didn’t think I had the time or patience during what was the busiest time of my work career, to raise a puppy. People who raise puppies and or kittens deserve medals! And yet, the rewards are unfailing love and loyalty. What more can one ask? When Nicholas was six months old, he suddenly started becoming protective. He barked at everything and anything. He even barked at the neighbor who lived across the street! Since our house was set back more than 300 feet from the road, and the neighbor’s house was set back as well. It was annoying, to say the least, to have Nicholas bark at something or someone that could barely be seen from our front porch! I decided then and there that Nicholas would never make it as a town dog. It was a good thing we lived in the country! Gus, by now, had resigned himself to the playful scamper of this young dog. He came to accept that wherever he went, Nicholas followed him like a shadow. He seemed to like it! Maybe he was beginning to appreciate his Big Brother role! Nicholas seemed to be the quicker of the two to notice if something moved, be it person, vehicle, or a leaf just fallen from a tree. He would start barking, and Gus would join in with his deep, “Woof,” as if to say, “just what is this fuss?”
About the Author
Inge Logenburg Kyler and her husband live in Michigan in an old farmhouse on eighteen acres. They both enjoy hiking the trails around their property, planting a huge vegetable garden, and taking care of the little animals that from time to time come to live with them. They have three grown children. An accomplished prize winning poet, she writes a monthly article for a local paper, Flashes.