
Jack Douglas's legendary memoir delivers the most brilliantly misleading title in publishing history. This 1972 comedy classic follows his adventures raising wolves in suburban Connecticut, delighting Johnny Carson's audiences while barely mentioning Japanese cuisine or Jewish romance. What made this Emmy-winning writer's book famous for everything except its content?
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Imagine waking up to a timber wolf howling outside your bedroom window-not in the distant wilderness, but in suburban Connecticut. This was daily life for Jack Douglas, his Japanese wife Reiko, and their two young sons in the early 1970s. Their household already defied suburban norms with a 200-pound mountain lion named Pussycat, an Alaskan malamute called Chibi, and a tiny Pomeranian aptly named Doggie. Yet Jack felt something was missing-a timber wolf to complete his vision of "total bliss." When Jack brought home a wolf puppy as a "Mother's Day present," Reiko's response was unequivocal: "I THINK I go back Japan!" Her retaliation-putting soy sauce on his apple pie-marked the beginning of an uneasy truce. The wolf puppy's integration was anything but smooth. He had "accidents" throughout their historic home and developed a fondness for destroying Reiko's clothes. After much debate about naming him (rejecting cute names as unsuitable for an animal destined to look regal), they settled on the simplest solution: "Wolf." As Wolf grew, he left his mark on their home-supposedly built in 1769 by iron mine tycoon Ezekiel Pettibone. His teeth marks adorned every newel post, mantelpiece, and door. When Jack found Wolf destroying the kitchen door, he wisely followed the Bronx Zoo curator's advice: "Never try to take a kitchen door away from a full-grown timber wolf!"
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