Foreword

Patty Douglas was a young, attractive girl struggling diligently to attain meaningful identity in life.

A sincere girl who wants to obtain a lasting marriage, she stumbles into two disastrous affairs back-to-back, involving, in the first instance the office playboy and in the second case her boss.

After being snake bitten she contemplates with desperation the future, not knowing where to turn or how. Through a remarkable chain of chance circumstances she ultimately becomes involved with male canines in sex.

"People often think that individuals who plunge into so-called deviant or strange sexual relationships are automatically disturbed in the psychiatric sense," a prominent sexologist related in a psychiatric journal not long ago. "These people are woefully underestimating these individuals they classify as either disturbed or sick, if not both. What they fail to realize is that, deviant forms of behavior often spring, not so much from psychiatric maladjustment, as from disappointments in conventional situations which cause them to cope for new avenues of pleasure."

The above commentary relates unquestionably to the leading character of "Canine Training School", Patty Douglas, whose search for sexual identity takes fascinating turns which are destined to leave the reader in a state of suspense.

Author Jason Phillips has woven a fascinating story about a woman who sincerely strives toward what she feels is right, who experiences the bitter side of life at many turns, but who ultimately rebounds to lead a rewarding and happy existence. Her experiences do her in good stead, even though the frustrations at certain junctures almost cause her to give up altogether.

Bestiality, just like any other sexual aberration, must be explored in an analytical rather than a damning puritanical light. To the author's credit, Jason Phillips has written a stirring account whose scrutinizing, bold, yet compassionate message cannot hope but enhance his reading audience's understanding of the complex question of human-bestial relations.

-The Publisher