Hello readers,
I couldn't resist sharing the latest editorial review of A Boy's Best Comrade. So grateful and thrilled for such a stellar review!
A Boy’s Best Comrade
Posted by Literary Titan

In A Boy’s Best Comrade, Lauren Ennis tells the story of Sasha, a loyal dog in Stalin-era Moscow whose life is repeatedly shattered by the machinery of fear, suspicion, and state violence. After losing Mikhail and Sofia to the NKVD, Sasha is taken in by Andrei, Tania, and their son Yuri, only to watch that family broken apart too. What follows is part historical survival story, part animal adventure, and part aching portrait of devotion, as Sasha and Yuri navigate hunger, homelessness, the Moscow metro, a stray-dog pack, and the dangerous kindness of people like Vanya while trying to stay one step ahead of betrayal and arrest.
I was most moved by how sincerely the book treats loyalty. Sasha’s love never feels cute in a shallow way. It feels bodily, instinctive, almost sacred. The early scene with the New Year’s tree begins with such domestic warmth, Sasha puzzling over the strange spruce in the apartment, Sofia trying to create a little “winter fairyland,” and then that warmth is cracked open by the knock at the door. I liked that the book keeps returning to that emotional pattern: a small, tender human moment, then the cold hand of history pressing against it. Andrei naming Sasha “protector and friend” stayed with me because the whole novel keeps testing whether love can survive when every institution is designed to make people suspicious, selfish, and afraid. Sasha, in her wonderfully stubborn dog way, keeps answering yes.
The writing has a big-hearted, old-fashioned sweep to it, and I mean that affectionately. It leans into feeling. But more often than not, that earnestness works because the story itself is so emotionally direct. I loved the texture of Moscow seen from low to the ground: alleys, stoops, station platforms, scraps of food, damp fur, boots, crowds, the underground geography known by dogs better than humans. Mishka and the pack bring a welcome snap of humor and grit, and the ending, with Sasha forcing Yuri onto the train and then being invited into a new pack, hurt in exactly the right way. It doesn’t give her everything. It gives her purpose, which feels truer.
I felt that A Boy’s Best Comrade is really about chosen family under impossible pressure, and about the quiet heroism of staying tender when the world keeps rewarding hardness. Its ideas are strongest when embodied in action: Sasha biting, guarding, smuggling, waiting, refusing to understand love as temporary. The book would be especially good for readers who like historical fiction with an animal narrator, emotionally sincere adventure stories, and tales of courage that don’t pretend survival comes without grief.
Pages: 269 | ASIN: B0FTWM9BB3

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