Nonfiction
Book
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PUBLISHED
©2025
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v, 343 pages : illustration ; 25 cm
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Prologue: 2013 -- Snoopy, Darwin, Linus, Hammy -- Where do beagles come from? -- Biomedical research: sniffing out answers -- The food, the drugs, and the administration -- The chemicals: on our skin, in our bodies, around our homes, on our pets -- Companions and cadavers in the classroom -- Adoptions: a kinder place for animals -- Liberation -- "This is where you were born" -- The "good" research -- Revisiting -- Agent Hamilton, transparency, and troubled middle -- The surrogate
"When journalist Melanie D.G. Kaplan adopted her beagle Hammy, all she knew was that he had spent nearly four years in a research lab. Curious to know more about this gentle creature's past, as well as the broader world of animal research, Kaplan-with Hammy in tow--embarks on a quest for answers. How did Hammy end up in a research facility? Why are we still using millions of animals a year in experiments? What have we learned from them? Is there another way? In Lab Dog, Kaplan investigates the breeding and use of beagles for biomedical research, drug and product testing, and education. She takes readers on a journey, peeking behind laboratory doors and visiting with researchers, activists, ethicists, veterinarians, lawmakers, and innovators. Along the way, she finds thoughtful and caring humans on all sides of the debate, explores promising developments in nonanimal testing, and discovers puzzle pieces from Hammy's past. Equal parts journalism and love story, Lab Dog offers a nuanced view on our relationship with a species that we both love and exploit, and a reason to hope for a better future for all"-- Provided by publisher